1922 Gem of the Mountains, Volume 19 - University of Idaho Yearbook

Page 1






PRESS Of' SHAW

6: BOADI:N COt.tPAN "

SPOKANE WASH

te:tate


GEM OF THE MOUNTAINS NINETEEN HUNDRED AND TWENTY-TWO

PUBLISHED ANNUALLY by the JUNIOR CLASS of the UN IVERSITY OF IDAHO

VOLUME NINETEEN

MOSCOW, IDAHO APRIL, l921

Page Three


Page Fou1路


'fo

CHARLES NEWTON LITTLE in sincere appreciation of his devotion to the cause of Education, this bool< is respectfully dedicated


FOREWORD

X

T IL \ S been o ur des ire to produce a year-book worthy of ou r Alma }.Jater , to br ing to you a re-

me mbr ance of your associa t ions wit h her, her idcab, her trad itions, and her ach ieYement:;, a long "ith the happy time:-; :->pent under her guidance. 1i '' e h<l\ e produced a Yolume that will help in a :;mall '' ay to keep a Ii \"e in the hearts oi e\ ery 1da ho ,t udcn t a \\arm ~low of affection ior . \lma ).[ ater we will not icl'i that

our effort has been in \路ain.

TTJE ST.\ FF.


0. R. \ \ ' E .\\' I ~IL ----------------- - ---------------- -Eclitor- in Chief \' ER:.! .\ \\' J LKT :\SO~ ___ _______ __________________ _-\.ssociate Editor

P.-\uL T. RO\\" El.L - - ------------ -- _ ____ Husiness ~[anagcr J.-\~IES \\' . F.\RRELL ____ ____ ___ ____ \-;sistant Business ~lanagcr :\IICH.\EL .\. TIJO~IETZ__________ _ _ _____ _______ ___\<h路ertising \\:ILLL\~f C.\Rl'E:\TER_ _________________ .\ssistant .\dvcrtising \\路. K. J TORX I :\G -- --------- - --- --------------------Photograph s GERALD ]. GILL _ ---------- - --- - --- - ---- - ------- -Organizations ERX EST i\1. D \ \ ' 0 R:\ K ______ ______ ------- --------------Athletics CL.\IRE BUR 1.1 :\G .\ .\IE ITO BSO :\ _____________ _________ Literary

II ELEl\ H LOO.\L __________________

-------------- ---- - - ---

.\rt

t

THO~fAS E. SPEEDY -------- --------------- ---Snaps \\"ILLLUI E. I 1.\:\[J LT0~ --- --- -- - -------------- 1 路-----.\fARG. \RET CO I.LJ XS ________ ___ -------------- ____ -- ---- _ Socict~ DO~ALD E. P.\ Y:\E---- ------ ----- --------- -- ----- ---------Jokes

GLADYS TL\STIE--------- ----- - - --------------- - ( .\Tiscellancous DElJLAJf D .\ \ ' IS -------------------------------- I

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C\)IPl"S-\\'J''TFR 路' .

~(

D.E:;


Page Nine


~II E g-lamour of college life cen-

riche~t

\J.) ters in traditions. It is the many happy memories of all the students of all the years that makes our ,\Jma ;\lat er so powerful in holding U ), long after we have gone from her doors. It is these same trad itions that arc the glowing, Ji,·ing spirit that is called the L'ni,·crsity. \\' hether that spirit is good or bad, whether that inAuencc i~ for the building of better citizens and nobler ideals rests in the hands of those who attend and add to it their contributions-mental, moral and spiritual. Idaho alumni do not lm e their .\lma :\later so much for what she has done for them as for \\'hat they ha,·e done for her. The of her gifts can be utilized onlv hy those "ho contribute unstint-

ingly. One of the most firmly established of these traditions is the Bonfire and Pep Rally the night preceding the Pullman game. For two days the Fresh have the honor and pri,·ilege of col lecting a great pile of rubbish to be burned as incense to the great god P l GSKlN. The same Fresh jealously guard the pi le to prevent any Pu llmanite with incendiary proclivities from igniting the pile too early and thus bringing down the wrath of PlGSKI:-\ upon the Sih·cr and (;old team next day. The bonfire is not the only event that takes place 011 the 11ight before the big game. .\ny citizen of ~Ioscow will tell you that the "Pep Rally" 011 that night is as wildly exciting as a three-day Fourth-of-July celebration and the battle of the :\I arne rolled into one. Late in the night the incense fire is lighted, the medicine men gi,·e speeches that would put fight into a \\'Ooden Indian and the pajama-clad 5nake dancers do a barbaric ring-around-the-bonfire far into the wee-sma' hours.

Page 1'cn


H arvard Contest ) HITILE not thoroughly established as a tradition as yet the llarvard Contest may well be considered as such. In no other way is the true spirit of a school expressed so unmistakably as in its rooting at any athletic contest. Is the school behind the team? ,\re its members true sportsmen? Are they big enough to take defeat and smile? Can they win a \'ictory without becoming arrogant? All those questions are answered by the way in which the rooters conduct themsch路es and arc conducted by the yellleader at a game. For any school to win a pri;.:c for its rooting is a compliment to its ideals.

\.1)

On the afternoon of October 15, 1920, when Idaho and \ Vashington State College lined up for the kick-off, no Idaho student present felt that Idaho would win, but they were there to put all the fight they could into the men who wore the gold jerseys and when the Cougars went home they felt they had tasted all the blood they wanted. The score wa s 7- l.f in their fanJr, hut Idaho won the I I an路 ani contest by a wider margin than that and proved herself broad-minded enough to root for a victorious team's players that were knocked out. The Pullman game is never a milk and water affairit is a battle to the finish and brings out e\'erything that a school stands for. \\' hen Idaho roots for a man she doesn't do it merely because her yell leader asks her to, hut because she admires fight even in a Pu llmanitc. The fair-minded, cheerful attitude, the loyal support of the team and the old 路'Jdaho fight" won for us the Tfan路ard contest in the fall of 1920.

Pnge Eleven


The Wearin' o' the G reen

'rc<O OVERCO~IE all the ill-effects of scrapping and hazing between '-J the Sophomores and Freshmen which held sway until the year of 1914 a series of athletic contests was adopted by the students and faculty by means of which the youngsters of the student body could learn to admire and lo\'e each other in the shortest possible time. As soon as the classes are organized a day is set for the big contest and Frosh meets Soph in a manly struggle to 路decide which is worthy to lay down the law. They wrestle and race-pick-a-back-tug路o-war through a stream of water from a fire-hose and do the ITu lme fight, originated by Dean E. M. Hulme. Then when it is all over they attend the "Bury the Hatchet" dance and amiably forget their differences in a general get-together in the gymnasium. Of course it is now necessary for the Frosh men to wear green caps in order that the "uppers" can readily distinguish them from the Sophomores. This is accepted by them in all good spirit because they know it has been done by generations of Frosh before them and wear them with as much nonchalance as the Junior does his corduroys and the Senior carries his cane. Another object in the enforcement of green cap wearing is this-it is based upon the theory that if a man can bear humiliation without becoming naughty he can bear ele,路ation without becoming haughty and thus a man is quickly catalogued as a good fellow or a "small-town sport" by the manner in which he reacts toward his little green cap.

Page Twelve


Campus Day

';-c<. l IE wearin' o' the green. instead of being an obscn路ance of the "Sev\...) entcenth of Ireland" alone, is continued throughout the year until Campus Day, when the Frosh is forever declared mature enough to doff his ,路erdant emblem. It is on this day, in the early part of ~[ay, that every man on the campus turns out under the supervision of authorized leaders to clean up the campus, repair drives and side-walks, and put the tennis courts in proper shape. Right merrily do the "hard-workin" college men wield picks and shovels and mix honest sweat with the rubbish they arc loading onto the trucks and drays. All morning long they work-their courage bolstered up by the paddles of an enthusiastic vigilance comm ittee and generous supplies of lemonade and sandwiches from the hands of the Campus Queens. When noon arrives, as it does all too soon to allow for the thorough completion of all the work, everything is finished as well as it can be in the time; tools and drays are returned and the hungry mob retires to the various campus eating houses to restore its inward and outward self to more pleasant normality. Everyone must be attired as on an Easter Sunday morning. for now comes the coronation of the :i\[ay Queen. She is elected a week ahead of time by popular vote. On this afternoon she marches down from the garden hill with her attendants and followers to her throne on the Senior seat under the maples. Here she holds her court. The ~Iay pole is wound -the dancers do their utmost to please her gracious majesty and entertain

Page Thirteen


her guests, the townspeople and students. Thus the afternoon passes. As six o'clock approaches an outdoor dinner is sen·ed on the lawn and everyone eats until t he last sign of anything edible has Yanished. The festi,·ities continue. Everyone must report at the gymnasium for the stimulating influence of a jazz orchestra. a well-waxed Aoor, and an armful of dancing partner. Even this must end and midnight sees the merry-makers homeward-wending and another Campus Day passing into history.

The Ivy Planting t::::.i{ ACI [

graduating class stri,·es in some way to leave a monument not so much as a memorial to themseh·cs, but as something to make the campus more beautiful, and every class since the early years of the Uni,·crsitys' career has planted trees and ivy- monuments that go on growing more beautiful and each year making .\lma :\later more worthy of holding first place in the hearts of her children. Thus. as the college year draws to a close, another golden link is welded in the chain that binds us as a great family to our .\lma ::\later.

\..:A.

l>al{e I•'OIII'lCt'n


The Song and Stunt Fest

0

0 CO LLEG 1·: yt·ar is complete without it no college professor could know how he is known- no student could otherwise express hi s honest opinions of his instructors. l t is first and last a screaming entertain ment and always the pulse of a student's feeling tel\\ ard the men and women higher up. It was instituted in the spring of JCJI5. after Dr. ~I. .\. 11rannon took the chair as l'rcsiclcnt of the L"ni' crsity. lt is the biggest vaudeville the fair city of ~loscow has had the privilege of witnessing e,·ery year since. In the spring of }<Jlg it was decided to hold the Fest on the night of the ~tate Tnterscholastic Track \[eet and in this "ay gi,·e the High School track men of the state the opportunity of enjoying the Uni,·ersity's most hila rio us e\·ent. It was on that memorable night that Slim Swanstrom s tarred in "Cleopatra" ancl made a thousand people laugh until they cried. That one e,·ent, howe\'er, was not the only artistic atta inment made by the "arious stunt committets up through the years that the Fest has been held - they are many and 'aried and always there is keen ri,·alry betwetn the classes for the prize:- oflered for the best songs and stunts. There is Grand Opera and slap-stick comedy. classic music and jazz, all of it original, and in some way hearing upon campus activities and particularly upon the fac ulty. Strange to say it brings the students and faculty nearer together. The Song and Stunt Fest has called forth many of Idaho's most beauti ful songs and is a direct answer to the prayer so aptly worded by Bobby Bum s : "0, To

~··ad St'l'

some po·wcr tire gifti,· gic oursd's liS olht•rs SC<' us."

liS

Pa!;e Fifteen


The Senior Sneak

O

NE bright spring morning the Seniors became very conspicuous by their absence. No one had had any warning as to their mysterious departure. "They can't have graduated," said a Frosh, "because they ha \'en 't recei vee\ their diplomas." That was very true; they hadn't received their diplomas because they hadn't paid their class-bill. It was posted on the bulletin board and everyone knew it. Those Seniors had sneaked. \\'here, what time, and how. no one knew. but it mu~t ha,路e been in the early morning watch. for not even the most nocturnally inclined Kappa Sig had any recollection of seeing the Seniors. Later de,路elopments proved, howe\'er, that a great train of eight-wheeled trucks left town between the fourteenth and fifteenth drink of moonshine, but they might ha,路e been headed for Paradise Creek or the front line trenches at Chateau Thierry for all that could be learned of "\\'hich way?'' So it was decided to leave the Seniors to sneak where they pleased and do nothing more to hinder them than pray for a heavy rain. It wasn't for anyone but the Seniors to know where they were sneaking any more than it was right for anyone but a Senior to sit on the Senior Bench. That a Junior, to say nothing of the Sophomores and Frosh, should have the impertinence to even think of looking for the picnicers was an unmentionable breach of tradition. Traditions are hard things to break. as -:\Tapoleon was heard to remark as he footed it over the Alps.

!'age Rh teen


Page Se,路enteen


l 'a~e

J 路;:gh te~n


UNIVfR.~ffY

Pal\'e ::-llneteen



Hail and Farewell ,\t the request of the editor I pause to look back UJ>On the past of the uni,ersity. a:. far as I have known it. and to say to the ,tudents a word of farewell. It i~ but a little way to the birth of the institution, a matter of Jc:•,;s than twenty-nine yt•ars; and of that tune I ha,·c been here ninctu:n years. Yet the period, brid as it is, has.heen quick with incident and development. ,\period of beginnings in the life of a university is always fraught with importance. for in it the character of the institution is determined. Such years, therefore, must surely count double the slowt•r yt•ars of maturity. as the spring counts double tht· mel low fruitagt• of the summer. One of the most significant and encouraging statements that havt• bt•en made h) our new pn·sident is that he soon became aware of the fact tlwt always there has hccn a little group of men here who have stood for sound scholarshiJ>. The statt• mcnt i,; encouraging in a two-fold way. It reveals the fact that the respectable standard of scholarship we have maintained has molded the character of the institution, and made an impress upon the students, in a way that may not only be diml) :tppreciated but definitely recognized by any stranger who has eyes to see. And it makes known to us that in our new chief we have a man who is interested in scholarly standards. Of all the achie,·ements of our uni,·ersity, this stamp it hao, succeeded in placing upon ih ~tudents is incomparably the greate~t. .\nd therefore the men who han: dom· thi~ work merit, in the fullest measure, your support. ··J have come that you might have life'", said the greatest of all teachers, "and might have It more abundantly"" And the teachers we ha,·e here, who han: ~ought to discipline you into enduring ~trength, who have stri,·en to help you to feel the ample grandeur of the destinies with which you are charged, may they not also share in this J>roud claim? They have had no part in the contemporary tragedy of applying the quantitati,·e rather than the qualitative test of excellence. It is you and they who constitute the university. Not in the buildings, not in brick and mortar, nor even in administra tivc officials who reside in places remote from the campus, shall you lind your Alma :\I ater. She is to be found only in the warm heart-. of your fellow ·students and your teachers, in their intellectual and spiritual reciprocity. Those two things, the st udcnt and the teacher, arc the only true and indispcn~ahlc parts of a college. Evt•rything else, however useful it may be, is merely ancillary. Tt is our teachers who from the first have made our university vital and have put it in the sure way to sucet•cd. And if the teachers fail of support at the hands of tht• students, wht•rc el~c shall they fii1d it? If the past supports the present, so thc present must jus tify the past. \on arc here to he made fit for the great work of this tinH' of social rcadjustnwnt hy your Alma :\latl'r s~·ck not her fanw in numlwr, onl). nor h\· cnntt"nt with ,•ictories won on gridiron and track. Gi,·e to her, in addition, tht• n;tml' of a schoc I of in~piration and duty. Let her children be known as men and women who t)l'rform "ell the homely and neccs~ary tasks that make habitable tht• land, who carr) successfully the honorable burdens of civic enrerprist•, who do their full share in making life happier and more worth while in our statl'. Let thi' he. while the year' flower and fade. the crowning and perennial tradition of Idaho. EDW.\RD ~~ \SLJ~ HUDIF..

T'nge Twenl)'-one


OR.

.\LFRETl

Tl.

\ ' I'll \\1

Pre..,ident n f the t_路n;vt路r"'lt)' of ltlnh o.

Page Twenty-two


]. c;,

EI.IIRII>G~:

Dean of tht• l ·nivt:r,il)

E. :'11. lll"L)IE. Faculty.

0. P. ('()("J.a:RILL Dean uf tht• CnlleKt of Law.

llt an uf the College of Lt:ll<r' nn<l Science,,

~:.

J, IDDINGS

llt-nn .,( tht· College of .\gricuhure.

Page Twenty-three


n~an

F . •\. TIIO~!S0:-1 of the College of

~line~.

F. G. ~fiLLER l>ean of the School of Fo•·est•·~·

J. F. ~!ESSEXCER Dean of the School of Education.

Page Twenty-rout·


BOARD OF REGENTS J. .\.

LIPPI~COTT, President- - ---------- --------------- Idaho City

J. G. H. GRA YELY, Vice President ____________________ Boise I R\ ' JXG E. ROCK\\'ELL__ ____________________________ Bellente R . \:\I SAY l\I. WALKER ____ ________________________ _ __ \\'allace ~IRS.

E\' ,\ ~

EVAXS-------------------------------Grange,·ille ETI fEL E. REDFIELD, Superintendent Public Instruction _____ noise

Officers of Administration and Instruction COLLEGE OF LETTERS AND SCIENCE Professors . \LFR~D

I I. l.JPlfAl\1, Ph. D. (Columbia), President of the l ' niver-

s ity. l\L\RTIA' FCLLER ,\:\GELL. Ph. D. (L'nivcrsity of \\'isconsin ), Profc:;sor of Physics. I L\ROLD LCCICS AXTELL. Ph. D. (Cniversity of Chicago), Professor of Greek and Latin. ERXEST JOY BALD\\"1:\. :\I. S. (Gnivers ity of Kansas) . .\ ssistant Professo r of Chemistry. (;R.\CE ELlZ.\BETH BALL, A. B. (Cni' ersity of Colorado) . . \ss istant Pro fessor of Economics. ED\\'JX ORLO BA:\GS. B. A. ( Iowa State Teachers' College). Professor of 1\I usic. JOSEPIL \\'ES LEY U.\RTO:\, n. S. (University of L'tah) . •\ ssoc iate Professor of Philosophy and Psychology. %I~LL\ I·:TJ I EL n I CELO\\'. B. S., IT. Ec. ( :\fichigan .\gricultural College) . Associate Professor of Ilome Econom ics. F I ~ . \:\'C1S ED\\'ARD BROPHEY, B. A. (Toronto Univers ity), Assistant Professo r of English. ~Ql' I R I~ FRED HRO\\'XE. :i\I. A. (Uni,·crsity o f Chicago), ,\ ssociate Professor of Economics. E\ I·:LY:\ BUTLER, A. :\I. (Columbia Cniversit) ), .\ cting Dean of \\'omen. Cl 'RTIS \\'ORTH CHE:\0\YETH, :\f. .\. (IJan ·arcl) . . \ ssistant Profe,<;or of English. ED\\'.\RD ROBERT CJIRIS:\L\X. Colonel C. S.. \rmy. Profc,.,-.o r of :\rilitary Science and Tactics. JOIIX TTOC:STOX CCS£J:\f:\:\. :\I.:\. (Han ·arcl ) .. \ ssistant Professor of English.

Page Twenty-five


J IAHRISO.i\ CLIFFORD DALE, A. :\I. (Han ·ard). Professor of Economics and Political Science. JAY GLO\'ER ELDRIDGE. Ph. D. (Yale), Professor of German, and Dean of the Univers ity Faculty. *PER.VIEA L JA:\'E FRE:\'Cll. :\f. A. (George \Yas hington U ni,·ers ity), Dean of \\'omen. FLOYD \\' HJT:\'EY G.-\IL. Ph. D. (Cni\'ersity of \\'ash ington), Associate Professor of L1otany. \\' ILLIA?II MERRIOTT GIBBS, Ph. D. (Gni,·ersity of Wisconsin), Professor of Bacteriology. H.ALPI L CL IRYSTAL 11.\RRlSOX. :\Iajor U.S. Army, Assistant Professor of J\Iilitary Science and Tactics. £1)\\':\RD :\!ASLIN IIL'L:\r£, A. :\I. (Cornell U ni,·ersity) . Professor of l Iistory and Dean of the College of Letters and Science. llr\LLIE HYDE. H. .'. (L'niversity of Illinois), Associate Professor of Tlome Economics. FRA:\'CIS JENKJ l\S. Pmctor and Secretary of the Faculty. KATHERIXE JE~SE!\ . :\I. S. (Uni,·ersity of l\linois), Professor of Home Economics and Director of fT ome Economics Curriculum. THOMAS KELLEY. D. S. ( Uni\'ersity o f Chicago). Professor of Physical Education and Director of ,\thletics. JOHX AXTOX KOSTALEK, Ph. D. (C ni,·ersity of Illinois) , Professor of Organic Chemistry. STEPIIE~ JACOB KROll. B. S. (University of Idaho), Assistant Professor of Chemistry. FR.\~CTS

BAKER LAXEY. Ph. D. ( Yale Gn iversity) . PJ'Ofessor of Geology.

GEORGE LeROY LCKE. Professor of Physics.

~I.

.-\ . ( L' ni,·ersity of \\' iscons in ), Assistant

HOBERT EARL ilfcCOR~liCK. A. D. ( Harvard). Assistant Professor of :\lathematics. D .\ \ ' ID :\lAC 1\liLLAX, Assistant Physical DirectoL ED\\'ARD F. l\IAS02\, B. Lit. (Columbia University), Director of Publications and Instructor of English. GEORGE 1\IOREY 1\IILLER, Ph. D. (Heidelberg University), Professor of English. IREXE WATSON 1\'lURRAY, Assistant Professor of Physical Education . *On leave of absence.

Page Twenty·six


RICHARD .\ \'T I IO\'Y ~ I CTTKO \\ 'S I'- I, l'h. D. (Un iversity of \ \'isconsin), Assistant Professor of Zoology and E ntomology. ~L\RGARETTE

LOUSE S.\ RGE);'T, ~1. .\. (Columbia University) . .-\ssociate Professor of Romance Language:-..

R.\LPH TT. S:\IITII, :\I. .\. ( Cniversit~ of California). :\ssociatc Professor of Entomology. :\L\RY BELLE S\\'I~ET. U. L. S. 1L'ni\ er:-.it) of Illinois) . Librarian and Instructor in Library Science. EuGEXE T.\YLOR. :\1. .\. (DePauw l'nivcrsity). Professor of Math emat ics. tWILLL\ ~1 JOSI~I'II TRD f BLE. l'h. D. (l' ni\'ersity of Wisconsin),

Professor of ,\merican His tory. I1EXRIETTE J. TRCnJ.\:\lL\CSER. l'h. D. (lfeidelberg Uni,·crsity) . .\ssistant Professor of :\Iodcm Languages. C\RL LEOPOLD YO:\ EXDE. Ph. D. (Goettingen l'ni\'er:-.ity). Professor of Chemistry and Head of the Department oi Chemistry. TIELEX \\'ECl\L\XX . •\ssistant Professor of ~~ usic. JERRY EDWARD \ \'ODSEDALEK, Ph. D. (l'ni"ersity of Wiscons in), P ro fessor of Zoology and E ntomology. V. H . YOUNG, Ph. D. (Uni\'ers ity of \\'isconsin). Professor of Botany and Plant Patholog'). Instructo rs a n d A ssistants in Inst ruction

GERTRCDE BORITO:\ .\XTELL . . \. 1:. ll'ni\ersity oi Chicago!. Instructor in Creek. \\' ILLL\:\[ Cl £ISLETT. JR .. Ph. D. (Leland Stanford Cniversity), Instructor in l~nglish. ISABEL \ \ '.\DS\\'ORTI I CL,\ RK. Instructor in ~lusic. KENNETH COLLI :'\S, Jl . •\. (Cniversity nf Washington). [nstructor in English . .-\XTOX D.\1 I LE:\. Sergeant G. S .. \rm). \ssistant in :\Iilitary Science and Tactics. JOHX \Y. DlCKI:\SO:\. Instructor in \ 'iolin. Theory and Orchestra. \'EL:\fA FR.\).!KLIX, Special Lecturer in :\ursing. TILL~IAX D.\~IEL GERLOCGII, B.S. (L1 ni,·ersity of Idaho), Re. search Assistant in Chemistry. JULIA DAY I N(;E RSOLL , ::.r. A. (University of W isconsin), I n structor in Romance Languages. tDeceased, December, 1920.

Page Twenly-Re,·en


ROBERT E.\STXOR JOH.-\~X E. EX, B. S .. ,\ssistant in Chemistry.

YlRGJ L R.\ Y~IO~ DE D. KIRKI-L-\~. e. S. (l'nivcrsity oi Washington), Instructor in Geology. :\J.\RY :\fcLE.-\~. D. .-\. (Cniversity of :\Iinnesota) , lnstructor f lome Economics.

111

J\J.\ E ~L\TI 11 EC', ~f. .-\. ( L'ni,·ersity of \\'ashington ) . Instructor in Romance Languages.

C.\REY DL'~L.\ P :\fiLLER. .\. n. (l'ni,·crsity of California), Tnstructor in ll ome Economics.

ELTG J ~0:E :A'A(; l~LE, Sergeant, L'. S. ,\rmy . . \ssistant in Military Science and Tactics.

BER~T X TELSOX, lnstructo1· oi Co rnet and Leader of the Cadet ~I ili tary

Ban<l.

.J.\:--: ET

E. SCOTT. B. A. ( \\' ashington State College) , Supen·isor o i Practice Teaching in Home Economics.

FLORE~CE R. SH.\RP. B . .-\. ( .-\merican Consen·ator) of :\Iusic) . Instructor in :\Iusic.

~1.\CDE SL.\\\'SO~. Instructor in Public School ~lusic. LO~IE \\' OODS. Sergeant. L'. S. Army . .-\s!'istant in ~lilitary Science and Taetics.

COLLEGE O F ENGINEERING Profe ssors

H ll'li.\RD ED\\' .\RD CHAXDLER, ~I. ~1. E. (Cornell Uni,·crsity) . Professor of ~[echanical Engineering.

J.

I I L' CO JO l l ~SO?\, E. E. ( L'nivers ity of Wisconsin ) . Professor of l~lcctrical Engineering.

C I I.\RLI~S ~ 1 ~\\'TO~ LITTLE, Ph. D. (Yale l'nivcrsity) , Professor of Civil l~ngineering and Dean o f the College of Engineering.

,\LE:-C\:--JDER R.\FFE:\ \\' EDD. C. E. (.\rmour lnstitut<.· of Technology) . . \ ssi stant Professor of Ci,·il Engineering. Instructo rs a nd Assista n ts in Instructio n

FR.\:\K \\' IGGIXS C.\XDEE. S. B. ( IIanard C"ni\Crsity) , Instructo r in ~fechanical Engineering.

R .\Y:\[OXD If.\RSCII. Instructor in Ci,·il Engineering. . \ . . \LDEX ~L\RDEX. Instructor in Shop Practice. WILLI\~[ .\RTTTCR :\IGRR.--\Y. B. S. ( E. E. ) . ( Cni\'ersity o i Idaho) . Tn!'trnctor in Electrical Engineering.

Page Twenty-eight


COLLEGE OF LAW P rofesso rs

OR\'ILLE PORT I ~R COCKERILL, LL. ll. (Ohio State Cni\'ersity), Professor of Law and Dean of the Colleg-e of Law. ~\L\"IX E. E\'.\:\S, l'h. D .. J.D. (Lni\(·rsit) of :.\Tichigan). Professor of Law. J.\:.\IES JOTI:\ GILL. LL. JJ. (Kent College oi Law). Profes~or of Law .

COLLEGE OF MINES Professors

FR.\XCTS .\ :\'D IH: \\· TIIO:.\lSOX. :.\1. S. !Colorado School of :.\ f ines), Professor of :.1 ining and :.\Tetallurg.'. and Dean nf the Colleg-e of :.\ rines. FR.\ X CIS lL\K I~R L \ :\" EY. Ph. D. 1\ ak L'ni' er~it) 1. Profe~sor oi Geolog_\. Instructors a nd A~si stan ts in Instruc tio n

ROBERT 1\.\XTER ELDER. :.\l. S. (.\Ictal.), (l'ni,·crsity of Idaho), Instructor in :\1etallurgy.

SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Professors

_L\:.\IES FR.\:\KIJ:\ :.\IESSEXGER. l'h. D. tColumbia l'ni\'crsit)), Professor of l~ducation and Dean of thl' :-:chon! of Education. THEODORE II. SII.\:\K. :\L .\. (.\~sociatc Professor of School \d ministration. Pf£TLIP JIE:\DRICK SOL'LE:\. :.\1. \. 1 I lope College). Professor of Education.

SCHOOL OF FORESTRY P rofessors

CTL\RLES ED\\' \HD 1\EHRE. :.\1. F. (School of Forestry. Yale l'ni\'ersity ).. \~:-;istant l'rofessor of Fon•stry. FR~\XCIS C.\R:\ER :.\liLLER. :.\f. F. !School of Forestry. Yale CniYersity ). I'rofessor of Forestry and Dean of the School of Forestry. lJ EXR Y SCI I :.\1 ITZ. l 'h. D. ( C ni' ersity of \ \' a ... hington ). .\ssi:.tant Professor of Fore:-;try. Instructors a n d Assistants in Instructio n

JOHX DAKE R TJ\ Y LO R. :.\I. S. ( Fo r.). (l'n i,·ersity o f :.\Iichigan), Instructor in Forestry.

Page Twenty-nine


COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE Professors II\::\~

\DOLF BE::\DTX£::\. ~r. ~- (Dairyl. 1111\\a . \ -:sistant Professor of Dairy II usbandr).

ROnERT KLJ::\E BU::\::\ETT.

~r. ~- (.\gT.).

~tate

College) .

(l.niversity of Kansas),

Professor oi . \g-ronomy. lll~R

llERT PERRY D.\ \ ' lS. ~f. S. (Pennsylvania State College), Professor of Dairy llusbandry and \ 'ice-DitTctor of the .\g-ricultural l·:xperiment ~t~ttion. DTCKl::\SO::\. ~r. .\. (.\gr.). (l'n iYCrsity of Professor of .\gricultural Education.

~lll·:tnt.\::\

~ l innesota ) .

\\'I LLI A~l ~I ER RIOTT (;lB BS. Ph. D. ( L'ni,·crsity of Wisconsin 1. Professor of Bacteriology and Bacteriologist of the Experiment ~tat ion. R.\LPII ELTO::\ (;Q::\GR.\\"ER. B.S. (.\gr.). (Purdue Cni,·ersity>. \ssistant Professor of .\nimal Ilusbandr). ROY IL\RTO'::\ GR.\ Y. n. S. t .\gr. 1. (Iowa ~tate College). Professor of . \gricultural Engineering. CL'Tili:ERT \\'RI<;Wr HICK~L\::\. B. ~- ( \gr.). (L"niversity ni ~I issouri). Professor of . \nimal Husbandr~. 11 \ROLD \\'.\TKl::\S HCLI~ERT. ~1. ~- L\g-r.). (111\\a ~tate College). \ssistant Professor of .\gronomy. Cll \R LES \\' 1 LLI.\~1 II L'::\GER FORD. ~I. ~- < L'ni,·ersit~· of \\'j-;. cons in). Plant Pathologi:->t of the l ~xperiment ~tat ion. 1\YRO:-J ITl'::\TER. ~1. ~- (.\gr. ). ( \\.ash ington ~tate College), Specialist in Farm ~Janagement in Co-operation with Office of Farm ~I anagement. l'. S. Department of . \griculture. E l )\\',\1~ I) JOII ::\ I DDI::\GS. ll. ~- (.\gr. ) . (Colorado .\gricultural College). Dean of the College of .\griculture and Director of the l~xperiment Station. Ll~\\ ' 1~ I~D\\'. \RO LO::\CLEY. :\1. ~- (.\gr.). (\\'ashjngton State College) .. \ssociate Professor of llorticulturc and ,\ssistant J lo rticulturist of the Experiment Station. Gl'\' R.\ Y~IO\' I) ~[cDOLE. ~f. .\ .. . \ssociatc Professor of .\grono my and ~oil Technologist. Experiment ~tation. 11 .\RRY PI~TER ~f.\G::\L;SO::\. n. ~- 1.\gr.). (l'niversit) of ::\ebraska) .. \ssistant Soil Chemist.

T<nr

C£1.\SE ~££.\D. B.S. IC. E.1. (L'ni,·er:-ity of California). .\ssociate Professor oi . \gricultural Engineering and 1rrigationist. Experiment Station.

Pa~e

'l'hlrty


R.\ Y E. :\ El ()[(;. l'h. D. ( Cniversity oi Iowa), l'roil':-sur oi \gricul tural Chemistry and Chemist. Experiment Station.

R.\ Y~lOX D Til L'RSTO:\ P.\RKJ I:\! CST. J:. S. ( ~lassadu1-.ctts l'ni' crsity). .\ssociate Professor of Poultry llusban<ir). ROBERT SIIIRLEY S:\YDER. ll. S. !Coc College). \ ssclt·iatc Chemist, l ~xperimcnt Station. CL.\RE:\CI~ COR:\ELICS \T\CE:\T. ~!. S. (.\gr.). <l'nrnell Cni -

vcrsity). Professor of ll orticulturc and II orticultmist. l·:xperimcnl Station. CIL\RLI~S 11 "\;\ I LlXE \\'ERK:\L\1\. H. S. (.\gr.), (Purdue Cni· versity), Assistant 1\acteriologist, ExperinH'nl Staticm.

J I ~ RR \'

1~[)\\.•\R I) \\'ODSED.-\LEK. Ph. D. ( l'niversity of \\'iscon:;in ). Professor of Zoology and Entomology an<i Entonl(llogist. l~x ­ periment Station. \'. 11. YOL' :\C. Ph. D. CCniversity of \\'iscon:-in ). Plant Pathologist. Experiment Station.

Ins tructors and Assistants in Instruction

J.

:'llORTO:\ FR \;\KLJ:\. B. S. (.\gr.). tOreg.ln lege) .. \ssistant in the School oi Instruction.

\grirultural Col ·

CII.\RLES llO~IER liCDELSO:\. 1:. S. 1.\gr.l. <l'niY<:r-.it) Idaho). Instructor in \'ocational .\nimal llushandr). \~I BROSE \\'1 LFORD JOH:\SO:\.

B. S. 1.\gr.l. 1l'nin~rsit) Idaho ) . .\ssigtant in .\nimal Husbandr).

ni of

11.\RR\' \'I RGlL ;\1.\TITE\\'. 1\. S. (Fort I lay:-. Kansa:-. State :\or-

mal School). Supen·isor of Practice Teaching in \ ',Irati Hlal .\gri cullu re. 1~ , \Y FR .\:\ Id.l~ ;\ lOR(;.\:\.

n.

S. (Pennsyh·ania State College). In -

structor in Dairy 1-1 usbanclry. ll 1\ l{OI. D 1.-\ \\' RE:'\CE RICIIARD~. \ 'oca tional l~<lucati o n. I~:\ I ERY ;\1.\RQCIS ROLLER .. \. 1\. ( \\'isc<lnsi n ~late l'ni\'l:rsity l .

. \ssist.ant in ,\g-ricultural Chemistry. JO~I~PII

~l'D\\'EEKS. ;\I. .-\.. (Ed.). ! l'ni,·ersity of Chicag-o), Instructor in \'ocational .\griculture.

1\R.\:\.\RD L. T .\ YLOR. D. Y. ::'11. (Kansas State

\gricultural Col-

lege). ln"trurtnr in \'eterinary Science.

l'a~e

Thirty-one


--------------

------= -

&lEi

----iii--a Ill

-

11111111111111111111111 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIUIIIIIUIUIIIIIIIIIII IIIIUIIIIEiii

Page Thh路ty-two



h.nu~t ... ,m

Ken• !all

J[o ... ic.·r

\ ·an ll oe -<'l

Senior Class Officers First .')cm,·stcr

S<'Ccmd Semester

l' n udsnn ______ ________ P r cs ident_ _____________ l Ia r mon I loiscr Cha rl es Darling __________ \ .ice- Presiden t ________________ F r ed C raf l ~ m e ry

If c kn Frantz _______________ Secret ary __ -------------- J ean Ke nda ll f~n d crsc \ ·an ll oescn ____ ___ __ T rcasurc r ________ l ~asl n or J o ha nn esen


Harmon E. Hosier, LL. B. "llarmj ·U)'" COLH\', Jo.. \'i~.\~, II . ~'~'t.

nu...

~-

)[gr . . . (;t.:m nf th4.:: "\[oun-

tain,", 1921: lfll'. ~[gr. ".\rgonaut" ( ~): Bench an<l Bar -'""·: \ 'igilance ("ummittt;t·

(4):

Ext·cutive

Board

(4): "EI\\t·ta,.. , Phi .\lpba Delta. "T/rrYt•'/1 ,,,. J'tt'ci("C dHt/ (jllil!t itt his homt•"

Jea n lngelow Kendall, B. A. "!. f. /\." MOSCOW IT. ~St•cretary P an Tlelk nic, ' 19, '20: Sec. nf Senior Cl:ass. '21 ; )r~ty Queen's ;\lnicl of H onor, 1920: ~[ortar Board Society: Econ. Cluh; Y. \\'. C. A; Delta Gamma. "Titr (arult.v (tft•u'l n/1 t,\'rauts"

Marie Elizabeth Anderson, B. A. "Audy" \IOS('O\\' 11. !'.. l~xt:r. Cummirtcc:. \\~omen·.., Leaf,ltue ( 3): ~l<ml>er-hit> Comm. of EngJi,h Club (.l): Sec.-Trea,, of ~:ngli-h ('Jub (~):

\lu<ic rru1>. Economic' Club (3): Y. \\'. {', A.: ~enior Ruff. Comm.; llramatic Club. "'Rathrr Hor.td• tu /u·r oti1•ious"'

Enderse G. Van Hoesen, B. A. "J'au" Pllll.l,l PS EX 1-:TER .\C.\ DE)l\' Orcllc'tr:• (2l: Engli'h Club (2) . (3): Econ C'lub ( J l: Tre•'· of Senior ('Ia": Track (2). (3): "I" Club: \th lt-11c llnartl: KaJ)I>3 ,\tpha.

Til~:

".1 H ut·trtJrk·ti:·e youug

flhtu''

Titus George LeClair, B.S. (E.E.) "Titt•" T.t-:\\' I STON l L S. (;lee Cluh ( I ) , (2), (J), (4): Quart<'l (2), (3), (4); Vic..·Pt·<',. . \ -.oc iatcd 1-:nKillt't'l' (.l). Pn.· '· (4); Sigma Nu. '' 'R,·s,trt"J:l'd' the cut•my· aud cou(JU<'rt•d"

Grace T aggart, B. A. "Pink" COLF \X H. S. \'ict··l'rt'. Engli•h Club (4): Exec. Cnmm. \\'umen·, League (J). (~): """tar lluarcl Snciety ( 4): Exec. ('omm. Econ. ('tub ( J). ( ~): Sec.· Trca•. l'an ll dlenic (~): \\'omen·, Cmtncil (4): l>elegate to Int<'r-Collt·giatt· Conference ( 4): Sec. Eron. Cluh (~); Ddta Gamma. "Tit~ brigltt~.<l liKI•I of llot• (!Jmily"

Page Thirty-fh·e


V iolet Certrude Sabin, B. S. (Home E conomics ) ..Ctrh-••"

n:x

D \\ I S II. S. \ ice T''" 11 . ~:c. Cluh. 1919: Y. \\'. C .\.: Ri<ltnhnugh H nll Tcnni• Tournament: Phi Cr•,ilon Omicrnn. ''.-r hrrn soh;n• crt•otlfrt• yet trot stingy" ·

Ru c£ell True S cott, (Pre-Medic)

B. S.

"nac .. Rll P I"~T H . S. ".\ " li<•nors (2): " lr' l lonors (1), (3); (;It·<' Cl uh (1), (2). (J), (4); Var• ity Quartet (2). (3) . (4) : Cast " Pi na fore'; P rc·:'lh·clic Clu b : Pres. 1\fusic Cluh (3): :\!gr. c;l<'t' Cluh (3); Beta T heta P i. "W!Jnt :d// t!Jc C-'amma l'ilis do u•l&cn JJnr lrat·cs "''

William W. Sutherland, B. S. (Pre -Medic) "Rill"

COFTR D' \T.EXE H . S . F...ditor 1921 "Gem of the 'fountain,": Glee Club (1), (2). (3). (4); Cia« Stunt (I), (.!) . (3): Cast " P inafore"; Chairman Fro<h Scrap Comnt.; ,\ rgonnut StatT (1), C?). (31: Sec.-Tre:". P re· \!~1. Club (2), (3) ~ Engli•h Cluh: Ethaunl Socictr: Iota Rho Chi: Pht c;amma Delta. ' . Is louR a.r his p~Jigrec"

.\ '-... nci:ttC'

Frances Eva ns Wiley, B. S. (Home Economics) "Frau" \\' \ TEin rr.u:. \\'X.,' H . s. \ '•ct·-Pre..... \\•mn:.n·, Lc-3gue: Delta (~amma.

"H'/(1' c/o11'1 1/rry sr11cl ;,. lrrr Rill ol t!Jc fir.<t uf tlrt• 1110111/J '"

Waldo W. Pierson, B. S. (Agr.) "Waldo Willi<'" J\C.\D E M\' "R" 1 lonor< (2): J\g. C'luh: Y. l\L C • •\ .: .\lphn Zeta. 11 Yo;sirst 111011 Ott tltc rompus" :'o rt :'l nl . l.l~

Carl Leon Patc h,

B. S. (Agr.)

"Patrlr.\ •"

llOJ!'E II. S. Dairy l'r<xluct• Judging Team, 1919; Dairy Cattle }u<i!tillll: Team. 1920. at Pac lruernatronal Live Stock Expo'ition, Portland; Sigma .\lpha Ep..,jJon . " T/rr Patr/1 tlrat lr olds"


Fre d Edwa rd Graf, L L. B. "Fr~d'' CO~:liR

0'.\T.E:\E II. S. \'.. Pres. Frc•hmcn Cia«; Pres. Sopho· more \Ia". •eeon<l <em. 1916·17; Tr~a.. A. S. U. I., 191i: 1st Lt. C:ulet Rattalion; T.t. 75th In f. U. S. ,\.; "!" Club: \' .• Pres. Senior Class; Football, 1917. '19, 'ZO: Track 1916; Rench atul Jrar ,\-sn.: Coeur d'.\lene Club: Phi ,\lpha Delta; Sigma Nu . .. rrry 1/a.Yiit· in his dtcisions''

Alice Manilla Swanson, B. A. "Sol/it•" l'OC.\TIO:T.T.O lr. S.

ld;thO Tt·chnical Tnstitute, '18. '19: Y. W. C. /\.: Economics Club; Kappa \lpha Theta. "SII~ S<111ir.r fort!r, but trc;·cr fifth"

Olive Muri e l Merritt, B. S. (Home Economics) "0/i-;·ia'' S.\ 'WPOT:\'T 11. S. ~·n" Honors (1). (2). (J): Pre•. H . Ec. Club (4); Y. \\'. C. ,\. Delegate to SeaiJt-ck (2): Cast "Paola and Francc..ca" (2); St·c. Y. \\'. C . •\. (4); Sec. Soph. Cia"; Phi Up>ilon Omicron; Kappa .\lpha Theta. "1/os o fruitY nom< otr<i fr,.itful tros('ccts"

C harles W. Gerlough, B. A. 11

CIIas."

'IOSCO\\' H. S. ~',\ " Honor• (J). (4); \.lee Club (3) . (4); i\fu"c Club: Economics Club (2), (J), (4); Beta Theta Pi.

Justin Byron Gowen, Jr., B. S. ( Mining) "/)utltly" C.\LD\\'ELL II . S. \ ' .. Pn·s. Cla~s (2), (3); V.·Pres. As·

~oc. 'Miner"' (J) : "University 01·che~· Ira; Fool ball Squad (I); Varsity (2), (3), (4); " I " Club: Assoc. :Miners; U. of 1.; :.rusic Club: Beta Theta Pi . .. ,~ 1/tt•tt_\'.r rt·mf.\' to match his biceps or JO'lCJ c1gaiu.tf gri<l .star or sidctvolk"

]. Philip Driuen, B. S. (For.) "Piril" li .\RRJSO:-< II. S. " S. C. (I). (2): Lieut. R. 0. T. C. (2). (J); Pre,.. \-.oc. For~sters (4); Staff "Idaho For~t<-r" (3): Track Squad (I). (2); Cro" Country (I); I ntcrcla-. Track (2); Xi Sigma Pi.

·.t

cou:·~rt

/rom the '-..ucm)"·s cllmft''

Page Thirty-seven


Helen Frantz, B. A. "11~1/j~ ..

'ro:-;cow lL s. Tn·a,. Sophomore Cia'": Srcy. Scm or Cln-s; Economic~ Club; Gamma Phi Bctn. ''1/cu tlwst• r/ri( Frt'rtciJ u•ays''

James Henry Fox, B. S. (A gr.) "Jimmy" NEZPE RCE JI. S. \ ' .• P re,..\ . S. U. I. (4): S tock J uclo;ing Tcnm (4): Athletic Hoard (3); Var· •ity na,t·hal l (2), (3): nc Smct Cluh: " I '' (l ub; i\g. Club: Phi

c;amma Delta.

"'I l•ry put him itJ tllr f'olititul J.!t"cn·c· .\'drc/, hut /Itt!)' nur'r /.:ill him"

Emery T . Knudson, LL. B. uKtuflt"

COEt'R 0' \ LF.:-1E ll. S. R't:nch and Uar: Chairman \ ig. Comm.: Phi .\lpha Delta; Kappa ~igma . .. 1'h1JI mystrrious St,'( dt ·•

Lela Mae Patch, B. A . ( En glish) "Pault~s"

liOISF. ll. S. ·· \" llonor- (Jl: F.ngli~h Cluh: Kappa \lphn Theta. l'cJtrhr.f {ort~·..•r, ..... ;tllout a siu~I.: /&ole''

Harold S. Ayero, B. S. (Mining ) ''Crall' COOIHN(; H . S. ("Ia.,, T r<'"'· (,l): Orchestra (I), (2): StatT, 19 1 ~ "C:c.•m of the Mo untains"; Editc>r ".\ qconaut" (3); Debate (3); Ph i G:unma Delta. ~' .\ o man nf ld.t l,rrmllla r-:,rr Ji-:·c-d H/' to sud& n tiirkuamt:"

Thurlyn Shrontz, B. A . ( Economics) uSIIriuk" 1.0:\C:\10:\'T, COLO., H. S. Economic' Club: Capt. CadN Battalion; ll<ta Th~ta Pi. " lm·rutor of thr R~la Th~la Pi~, f or ,,,,,,. al all lligll ·clau /u,.ch cou"lers"

P age Thirty-eight


Larvern Inez Borell, B. A. (Political Economy) "frern"

XORTII l 1'::'\TI{ \T H. ~" \" Honor. (.!). (J•. (4): \kmlx·r \Vomr-n'"t

Exec.

Boanl,

"16:

Sec,..

("ln..". '19: Y. \\'. C. .\.: Open (J), Pre•. (4): \\"omen's Gov· Council (3), Pres. (4); Eco· Club: Thc Big Four (3): Dc,:legatc to \\'oml•n's lntt·rcolle~iatc ("unft•rcncc (4): English Club: .\sst. 111 ll i". :11111 Tyrcwriting Dcpts.; K~1111a Kap)Ja Gamma. "llr~~<l•·tf $tr.,iglrt for tlu· Capitol"

luninr 'l>nrum t·rning nomic.'

Raymond Leslie Spangler, B. S. (Agr.) ".\~f'aug"

I ,ON(;)I OXT, COLO .. )1. ~-

"\" Tlnno•·, (3): Colo. College Cl). (2); """'a' StaH· Agr. College (3); Student .\,~t. in .\gronomy: .\g. Oub; \lt>ha Zeta: Ueta Theta Pi. l~n,fr.f.Wr c( Ctlltural Enxlish in Jlu• .111. Clrrm. Drpt."

William Cook Butler, B.S. (C. E.) "Jflom/'ws"

IrOI!'£ II. S. llonor. (1), (1); Sigma .\lpha Ep,ilon. " .\(rut bt• som.- rr/atro11 to a KAT''

"II"

Virginia Dermott, B. A. ''Ginger"

\IOSCO\\' II. S. Ecunomic.., \luh: Trca...,, Junior Clas': nc Sm<·t \lub: Junior Prom Comm.: Cnmma Phi Beta. '".\ ·u,u· nu1 romf"oJrc tltitlt tlu All· \"ortll1t'cst Vamp"

F'elix A. Plastino, B. S. (Agr.) urlasty" 11).\110 Tl•:( II N J(',\L H\STITUTE Fnnthnll ( 1), U). (J). (4), ('apt. (4); (':ult•t Lt. (2): 2nd Lt. U. S. A.; \thlc.•tic .\ clvi'iory Hoard to the Pre..<;.:

\', l'rt•s, Zt•ta;

St•ninr

~igma

l'lnss

(3);

Alpha

Nu.

' f<llr.<t f'/•·tll/1' to t/1<• Si111110 ,\'u c/raf'· l4•r of tl~t• Hrm•,ficts' Cluh".

Howard H. Hansen, B. A. ''J/,u•s·•

\ \SilO:-\, \\'X., II. S. l'ni\C.·r .. ity of \\ a'hington, '15, '16, '17: Beta 1;amma Sigma (U. of \\'.); Si~rna :\u

"A raurliclatr for tile (ro11t r(n.«: at tile tlr~ot~r"

Page Thirty-nine


Edith Mae Dingle, B. A .

.. ,,.,,

('OI~l

R 11".\U

:->1,

II. :-;,

lh.·lta (r.unma. "'\ D rt•lcllidll /o t/11· l>III£·1MI

family"'

Ca rl A. Burke, LL. B. "/lurA····· ~T \J(

II. S.

''II"' II nneil' (ll, C2). (41: l khatc ( l l. (.I); Ca1•t ( a•l<"t ltaualwn: Track ScJt.ac l : Ph i \ lpha l klta; Phi Gam·

ma l klta.

"Uur~·c·'.'t lu1~· J't lc'/i(t' ~·c•('f..'i ~rim .w tH· t~·t ue~/ly J,u.n· ftc lw.ua I tuuc· to llld~'t'

/11.\

I rae/,·

lt'ltcr''

Cyrus Elmer Roberts, B.S. (Ag r. ) "*i)Jr~

r(\' •

Hui,t· 11.

~.

•· \'' llunur' (I), (.~): ·•rt" Honor.. I!)· l!ngli'h Unit: \g Club: .\lpha Zc·to. l'lu lie·Ita Theta.

Lillian White, B. A. '/.ill \I o:-;n m H llunur... ( 1). (.,?):

. ._, ..

CJ):

Ext·c

Uoarcl

s. ··tr• llon,,r ...

\\"nmen·..,

r~aguc-

1.?). Pre,. (J): Y. \\". C.\. Cabinet !4): ·· \ rgonaut"' Staff (2) . (J): Engli'h Club: ~:c·onnmic~ Club: Kaj)· pa \11•ha Thc·t;t. '''//rc 11'/rilc• / ,j/y f>.-rsouifird"

Alfred Sanford Nelson, B. S. (Physics) ...\'c/.c" KENlliUCK )1. S. " II" ll nntll'' (I); Tht l•:lwctas. "H'Iwt dot/' ltr• tltiu/;; tc'l/"

Fre'd Dewey Stewart, B.S. (Agr.) \IOS('O\\ }I S. ( UJ>, \g. Hay (,1): Jrd Pri>e, (, a in. JuclJ,Cutfot C]): Dairy Product-.

Jl;~i ·)

lu<lgml{ Tc.:am. Pacilic International ti\'c.• Stuck Show (4): Frecolunan Football; \g Clnh: Sigma .\lpha EJhiloll ~~u,•

olsj

s,,l/• ·s /or/It'

Pnge Forty


Mercedes jones, B. A

(English )

··c;.l,il-'' 1-.l'<a:x E. OH E.. H. s. l'nt\ t rslty of Orl't(:Otl ( 1): ''.\'' l [onor ... t.'l, <Jl. (4); f.nglish Club (2), (3), t ~ 1. Pre• ( 4): ('h. Program C'omm. tJI. \rgonaut (J), (4); Assoc. E<l. LIJ, Fcatur<· Erl. ( 4): Society F.<L, 19.?1 "(;t.•m of the '[nuntatns"; Jun· ior Pnmt Cnmm.: Economics Club; \ lot lar Board Snciety: Gamma Phi lkla .

Reuben Frederick Johnson, B. S. (Agr.) "Rubr" 111.\110 F.\LLS H. S. "B'" llotl<tr- (2): "\" llonurs \ ' . l'r<<. Afo(. Cluh (3), Pres. P~c.·-..

Junior

Barh, ~ 4); Stock \IJOha Zeta. · l?ul•-- I

H

(.1):

(4); Pre.•.... ..\ ... ~oc.

Cla~s:

J urlginl( Team (4);

lwlf·do:ru ri'f'ulatious to Ji:·•• ttf' tn"

tl

Charles Stuart Warren, B. S. (Agr.)

··ch rr/ir" ' ' EIH I)[ \ '\ II S. \n, Jlu,, Cu(o, \1(. llay. 19.?0: Stock ft~~hUnfl Tt·;un, 19.?0. Pre..... Lindle)' llall (4). f

H.·m~ml,,·r

tlu.• .111-.\·ortii·H't'.d S,·r· f~Otlt"'''

Mary Lelia Clark, B. A ".\fur)'

.1 ,.,...

,\tOS\0\\' H. S. Tn·hlt· ('J,.r Cluh (.?), (3), (4): Eco· ntotnic' Club ' (Jl: ~[usic Cluh (3); Y. \\'. (', ,\ , Cabinet (4); English ('Juh. "1/trf'ft;u<".U

i.f

1c•orth o lot tlaesr Jays"

Paul llinc hliff, B. S. (Agr.) "Jli11k;r"

JI(I':W PLYMOUTH JT. S. lo"a Stale College, 1916·17·18; Band, I111 ~-1'1·20·21; •\~soc. narb'; A g. ('Jult; Cnrpl. S. A. T. ('. " lrtJ /tr still goes n•ltisllirtg

011"

Frank Morton Erickson, Jr., B. 5. (Ph ysics) "Eric" :\IOSCO\\' ll. S. ··.\" Tlunor

(1), (2), (3) .

._.,., .flatJrk in

th~

l11b."


Alice Edgec omb, B. A. (French ) "~11iC't"

E."

:\!OSCO\\' ll. S. "II" Honor$ (I). (.!), (J); Kappa ,\1l•ha Theta.

William H . Carder, B. S. (Ed.) "/WI" :\IOSCOW H. S. (h. Junior Prom Cmnm . 1918: J\ s.st. Zoology Dept. 19 19·2 1; Basketball ( 1) . (2). (3), (4) : Pre-Medic Club, P res. (3): "l" Club; Sigma N u. "JI'tJr 1/or.<e Willie is still o" tl1c tcar-H

Ca rl Frederick Nagel, B. A. "llutcla'' o:::•<ESEI~

II. S.

\'ar-ity Football (2) (3). (4); Cornmcrcc Club; "l" Club: Stgrna Nu. "011c of tltou 1/CIIII~. little Sigma N~t lro,\'S

Margarette Florence Bauer, B. A. ( Romance Languages) JrOIS~: )I

S.

",\" l!onor- (1), (2). (J): Pres. Panlldlcnic ( ouncil: \.·Pre;.. Y. \V. C. ,\.: (;let· ('luh (1). (.?): Senior Mortar B<>ar<l Society: Kappa Alpha Theta. • '/ llot t ..·on,/t:rful SttJYY·Iit bower"

Edwin V. Foran, B. S. (Mining Geology) "litl'l

F R \=--KLI:'-< H . S., SEATTLE Ext•c. Bonn! Economic$ C lub (3); Glee ('tuh (3); 1\"t . ,\dv. Mgr. "Gem nf tht• :I I<Htntain," (3); Pres. Assoc. :llint•r, (4): \':~rsi ty Baseball (3); 11

]"

Club: Sigm:. Nu. ''J~,l .wy.f JcJ~,ho

is bl'st"

Francis Ogden Younga, B. S. (Agr.) "Frank" T\\' 1:'\ F.\LLS H. S. ",\" llunur. (I), (.?), (3). (4): Cup \\'innt·r. Grain )ud>t•n~ (4); Editor \g. ".\rgonaut" (4); Student Asst. tn ll<>t3fl)' ( 4): .\ . E. F. Club; Alpha Zt·ta: Phi Delta Theta. "fl•s .tt,ord is 1til/ o f"lou.. siUJre1 t1Dt4' a trartor P•fils it''

Page Forty-two

b11t


Fleeta Brennan, B. A. (English) "Patti~"

0.\ KL.\NO, C.\ L., H. S. San Franci'Co State Xormal School. Cal.; ".\ " H onor" (4); Secy. Eco· nomics Club ( 4); Exec. Bd. Econ. Club; Chairman Comm. Engli'h Club: Jazz Rand Show Comm.; Ba<ket lrall (J); Ca" " Clarence" (4); :\for· tar Board; Ka(>pa Kappa. Gamma. "O<Jol• Cla·a·a·arr11rrl"

Leo n B. Taylor, B. S. (Agr.) "Buuny 11

DUIIL II. S. " II" Honors (2); " A" ll onors (3) . (4); Annual Staff (3): Poult ry J udgi ng T eam (J); Stock Judging T eam (Jl, ( 4); Alpha Zeta. "Brst cloickcu judge ;,. college"

Royal Vin cent Starr, B. S· (Agr.) "Ttdttkll'"

T \\' 1:'\' F.\ LLS II. S. "II" Honor~ (1), (2); ".\" llonor(J): \ 'icc· Pre<. ,\ "oc· Barbs: "(;em of the ' l ountains'' Staff (3); .\lph"

Zeta: The Elweta'. Hot'· I wot•der -;.d~at you

rl''

Ha rriet Elizabet h Ensign, B. A (English ) ''Patsy"

J Oli N :\1.\ RSII \ LL. CJ!IC,\GO. H. S. <:lticago Normal College; Engli•b Club ; See.·Trcas. Committee of Forty; .\1· pha Delta. ''lfers isn•t merely a t('artime c.ommis·

sion 1n tlte .Y<iJ::y"

Robe rt Neil Irving, B. S. (A gr.) uGtts" RU P ERT II. S. ' · U" Honors (2), (3); .\thletic Board (2), (3), (4), Trca•. (J); Ju nior Prom. Comrn.: \ 'arsity Football (2), (J) , ( 4 ); ,\II·Northwest llalfhack, a nd Capt. Frt•sh mcn Team: Hig h P o int Winner, N. W . Con fe rence .\ [n't (2): Candidate for A m . Qlynr· pic Team: Comm . for Oestroying Arc Lights (3), (4); " I " Club P res. ( 4 ); Hcta T heta Pi. ·'~1·/ao C'Otl

fill yo11r 4/'ocs ·wlrcn \lrr tone, Gus ' "

:)'OU

Wi lliam Earl Pechanec, B. S. (Agr.) "Bill''

N \ :\f P.\ 11. S. Stock Judging Team (J), (4); Broke \ Vorld Record when getting away wtth W . S. C. Fez Cap; Ag. Club; The 1-:lweta~. "Thot turit>l~ {rtss~rl"

Page F orty-th ree


Marga ret Hannah Fa n ning, B. A. ".Hargt' II S .. GR.\:-10 FORKS, X. D. "II" llutwr' (1), (21, (J); Economic~ Club. ~lODE!.

''.1 comfortablt> IHJnu.· /or Slwunt>r"

Boyde Wallace Co rnelison, B. A. (Com.) "Corury'' )10$('()\\' ll. s. Glc·c· Cluh (1 ). (4); )fanal'(cr o£ Gke (_'!uh ( 4 >,; ~lanagt•r of \t hletics (2): Stl'(mn Nn. "llr t~ln•d)'.f """'t'Kl'.f -some u•ay"

Grover C . Evans, B. S. (Ag.) "J)ukt·"

" IERIC.\N F.\LLS II. S. Prc,icknt of "1" Club (4); Econ. Club; Suntlwa,lt•rn lclahu Club: Football (1), (2), (3), C'apt.·clect (4); Ba'c lla11 (1), (2), (J), Captain J); Sig· ma Xu. "llold.f tltt'" lon~;~di.tt,wrr atttiJdcmtt" ru rJ still good f •r some ycur.<'

Gladys Louise C lark, B.S. ( H . Ec.) "Glad' FR.\:\!;.I.J'\. '\ II, II. S. :\ORTII CE'\TR \L II S., Sl'OK.\'\E. Fn· ... tun .n, . Sol-thunwrc:. Juntor. an'l Stnior nantt" Committcc<:ot: Trea' Soph. Cia"; Sccy. of Jumor Cia<'; S~y. of \\omen', League (3); Sccy. o£ !lome t:C. Club (J): English Club Plap (J); "\ocm" Stall (J); "Argo·

naut" Stall (J); Exec. lid. o£ \\'om· Lt•aguc (J); Prc;ident o£ \\'om-

~n·,

tn'!'l Ll·aguc (4); Governing Council (4); (;amma Phi Hcta. "Cougltl l>y o Gus·l of .lpril l>rrc:c"

Edwin Daniel Peterson, B. S. ( M . E.) " (I)"

WAHDNER·KI•:LLOGG H. S. Glee Club (I), (2); Associated Engim•<·r,; !land (I), (2); Ca<le Captain ancl Bnttalion Adjutant (3), (4); ~igma ,\lpha ''l"ilon. "Si::r isu't rt·cr)'lhir~g as .Nopoleon said"

Ralph R. Breshears, LL. B . .,Bunt"

C \LD\\'ELL H. S. IJl'l>ate {I), (J); Oratory (3); Bus. ~I gr. of ".\rgonaut" (2): Ex~. Bd. (2); En,ign R. F. '18; Football (1), (2), Captain (J); Base Ball (1), (J); "1" Club; Phi Delta Theta. "8 1111 , qualifird for track sincr 1•.tton tlu• Irish ,.ace''

Page l'o•·ty-fout·


Loran Woodworth Kitch, B. S. (Agr.) •'SktlOtC'i&''

COEUR D'ALENE H. S. ".\ • Honor~ (I), (2), (3); 1920 Stock Judging T~am; Ag. Club; \'ocational Club; .\lpha Zeta; Sigma Nu. ,.Go Sot~IJ&, )'Oitng matt, go So~ttl,''

Leta Mae Sabin, B. S. (H. E.) TEN DAVIS 1£. S. "n'' llonot·s (1), (2), (3); Home Ec. Club; Pres. of Home Ec. Club (3):

Y. W. C. A.; Treas. of Y. W. C. ,\, (3); Women's Council (3): Pt·es. of Hi<lcnbaugh Hall (4): Phi lfp,ilon Omicron. "A light tllat docs not glimmer"

Bernice Co rneli son,

B. S. (Zoo I.)

\(()SCOW )1. S. Tr~blt• Clt•f Club (I), ( J): Pre,idcnt of Y. \\'. C. \. ( 4); Student ,\-.,si,tant in Zt>alogy. ·· .'iricnt·~ i.t ,,,, all of on~ sr.r ..

Lealie Nelson Moe, (':-\10:\ II

B. A. (Com.)

S .. •.:t:I.I.O<:<~. ID.\110.

{;tt·t· ("lub (Jl: Orchestra (1). (2), (J): Prf',ich:nt of Junior ("Ia,,: J>re ...idcnt n( Econ. ('lub (4): )fu<ic Club: "Pq>" Baml: Jla,k<-t Hall (1). (.!), (4); Track (1). (21: lla'c Ball (1), ( J) ; Beta Tht·ta Pi. •· U 'hal• nJu t,•t• g~t .llo' td1ru yo' all 1's xotu• 'f''

Raymond Harsch, B. S. (C. E.) '"Ru>'" n:CIINIC.\1. If. S .. \\'ASI!INGTOK, ll. ('.

Ct•o. \\'nsh ingtnn \1., 1915·'19; Track Tcnm, IQ20-'ZI; Sigma l,hi l·: psilon. ".\'ot Jwl(

tr.t

llm•,frll (l.fik

(l.f

,\/,,•it•.,

fie

S(lllllil$-

Leon P e rrin e, B. S. (Agr.) :\'EZ PI':HCE ll. S. Sht·nth~cl llnmm~r Club; "I'' Cluh: \thl~tic lfc>arcl (l). (J), (4): s~concl

pri7t• 11\ .\g. lla)' c:rain Judging (3); Fuc>thall. '17. '1!1. '19. '20: Tro,ck. 'I !I, '19. '20, '21: Ba,kt·tball. '19, '10: '21; Track Capt., 'll: :\l~mb<:r of 19ZO .\mcrtcan Ol)mt>ic T~am; Sig· mn .\lpha Ep,ilon.

"'Tirl' i·urt/

of "''"'

t4-'l' malu· in /JcJho ..

f"'age Forty-five


Joy C rockett, B. A. (Ed.) "Jo ·• l.l '\UH.'\ IL s.. LOS \XGELES (,rae!. nf I.e" \ngd~, junior College: Stuclt·nt t'. of S. Cal.; \lpha Delta.

"Joy lc>

tl~t•

:t•or/J"

Clarence K. Herr, B. S. (E. E.) "Scrkay" ··.\ "

l'RI EST IU\'EH 11. S. llonor. (I), (2); ,\<;..~oc.

ut•t•r..,: ".\·<·r~·n.\'

S igmn ,.\ lpha

Engi·

Ep!';ilon.

llrurtl t/r(• rail, uuJ came n· running"

Jam es Henry Felton, LL. B. "1/mr~·"

'!OS("O\\ ' 11. S . ..n.. II Hnnr' ( 1) : ...\ .. t lemur~ en. 1.1\; Y~ll nuke (4): Phi .\lpha I) Ita: The F:lwcta,. ·•on l~•:~)'rr tdto tt;i/1 rr.tt on qua/it)' -not quantity,.

Lenora Inez Elliott, B. S. "Sis" :\!OSCO\\' I L S. ''11·,. kttoh• lt'.H thou nothing obout lu•r''

J Clarke Rush, B. S. (M. E.) ''Ia;:;''

\.R \NC:I•:\'ILLJ-: 11. S. \ 'ar,ity Haaul (2): .Jazz Band (4): . \ ...,nc. bnl(nlt>er': Sagma ,\lpha Ep,ilnn. "Ju.<t n·111rla Cl"d·r Rusla tl~e keys"

.<ll,.

Carl Hill Swanstrom, LL. B. us;" (."1 llHTDC:I' 11. S. llnnor< (2): " \ " Honors (3): ,\rgonaut (1). (J). (3). (4): Ed· itor (4): International Debate (3); EngJa,h ('lub: Jlcnch ancl llar: \'ic•·· p,.._.,, Junior Cia~"; St.•aheck ••y .. Conft·r~nce '20: Or~tanization• E<l· itor "Gem o( the 'lountains" (3): .Tuniclr Prom Comm.: Signal Corp,:, '1~: Phi .\lpha Delta: The Elweta•. "1 Ia~ ~1.-:·lltiotJ of tltis Hill is as yet "II"

a tu)'41~ry"

Page Fot·ty-stx


Mary Gannon, B. A. "\fur·'

"} t'dh, l!dry go • .f to sc/IQOI hrrc''

William H. Langroise, LL. B. "Rill" E~U!ETT

H. S. "II" Honors (.!), (4); Pre•. St>J>h. ('Ia"; Clerk ami . \ ssoc. J u.'it icc Bench and Jrar (2), (3); ,\d\•, ~lgr. "Ct•m of th e ~fountains" (2); Bus. ~lgr. 1921 uc;t•m of the l\lountain~·· (3); Editor 1\q;connut (.l); Pres. , \. S. LJ. I. (4); l'hi .\lpha Delta; K :tJlJl:t Sigma . .. Kt•rp comlug, /li/1, -;:,,r·rr for ''ou"

Lewis Ambrey Thomas, B. A. "Rrtl"

\T.nTOX ST.\T~: XOR\1\L. p,....._ S. E. ltla t'niv. Club: State Campaign \Jgr. fnr Student Rate Bill; Capt lda.·W S. C. Xcgati,·e Debate '1\·am (4): former SuJ>t. \Ji<l\\ay 11. S.; l'rt·s. of Jeff. ('ouut~ Teachc:r•.; \ ..... n. "7/u·

J /romJs

/1 ""~

~lrrtri,·

t" ill

liKiil"

rt(":·..r

t:d

tl ..

Jeannette DeArmond Clark, B.A. u/t•dn''

\!~:Rmr

\ x H. s.

( ollcgc of Ttlaho (I). ( 2). '',I bit uamc sugg,:sts b•-K

~lt-,•tls ..

Alonzo Anthony Brazeau, LL. B. "Hru:''

OCONTO, \\' IS., 11.

S.

~ l arqut'ltl"

l'•uvt>rsity. ~rilw:mkc.:l', \\'ts. (1), (.!), (.l), (4): (;lee (.'luh ( 1),

(.?).

Pre.·~.

llc>nnl:

.I r.

(.!): llus. 7\lgt·, Cia~"'"; Pn·'·

llu•. ~I gr. Track ".I ,.._.n~ut (rtri;·a/''

(2). 3): . \ dvi"ior)· (.l).

Clarence Robert Hibbard, LL. B. "/lob'' \\ .\1.1..\CE II. s. Ch·rk llt·nch ancl liar (3): \d\'. '[~r 19.?0 .. (;t·m of tlu.· :\luuntaans"': Jun· 1ur l)rcuu ( ..umm.: Kappa Sigma. ·•.Jnotlr ,., uf't/i,"tJIIt f· Y o Jti11Ct at tlr<' bar" 1

Page Forty-se\'en


E d ith V iola Starr, B. A. \"turr •''

:\1 ~.IH Ill \ '\ )I

S.

Cnllc.•gt· uf [dahn.

C harl es

Hamilton

Darling,

LL. B. " l lm~t"

BO IS t·: 11 S. Soph. Clns': \ 'u,·c- P n.''· Scnir•1·

P n·.... ('In,<: llu,, ,\ l gr.• \r go naut (.?): lk·

halt• (1), (2), ~l gr. (,1) : Capt. Ca· dl'l lin. (3); (' hid Ju"ict• Bench and Bar (Sl: ) Lcmht·r of .\ rc Light 1}(-.. lroying "1\·ttm, '19 '.!0; Jh:ta Thl· ta Pi. •·, 1no/Ju•r l\wclidtrlc /u1· tire~ I rro;.c.•dt•,t {rout rott •·

Jame s Henry Winegardn e r, B.S. (Phys ic s) 'Juu"

l'

OF I

l'IH:P

",\" llnnur' (,1). ''}It' l.·11o:~ b t~.·llat

\. 'h t

n~:PT.

~;.

F . Cluh. l.rr•l /r,.,,. 111 tlrl'

.u,.,hdt' ,,, .lg.·s··

C arithon Roy Patrie, B.S. ( For.)

.. ,.d,..

1'1.\'\IOl'TII , \\'I S .. II. S . .. \" II '""'" (I). (.l): l·:•lil<>r Furcsl \nnual: Fon.•,tr)· Cluh: ~~ ~1gma Pi. ''Frt.'Ufh

t':'4'H u"IU t/u•

H(t/"l'r

/it''

Mary Ernestine Brown, B. A. (Romance Lan g ua ges) ) lO S('() \\' l I. S . .. \ " ll onor' (I). C2l. (.1) : \lpha Tht•la .

Kappa




Page l'lfty-one


"11111,11

Ro~e

Paylll'

llorning

Phillippi Sangl路r

(;ill :\l acey

Junior Class Officers First Scmcsla

Second Scmcsta

(;crald Giii_ __________________ Presidcnt_ _________ Donald Payne J larold Simon ______________ \ ' ice-President_ _________ Keith l lorningErnestine Rose ______ ------ - -- ~ecretary ------- _ ----Inez Sanger Stan ley P hillippi __________ ___ Treasmer ____________ . ~ l arshall :. lacey

Pa~e

Flrty-two


11.\IH>I.Il LESLIE S DIOX, B. S. (C.eol.) "Butc/1' Cotton\\ocxl I I. S. "'I\'' ltmwr' (I); \ ·ice·Pre ... Juni()f ("la-..s; English Cluh; Phi . J>eha Thc·ta. ''Rutrll

tl'OS

u tJt~,•ful goa,/ sluc!t·ut ()tlfi' ..

\. 1,,\TIIT.EI·:!\' STE\\".\IW. I\. S. "'Kelly"'

Fnllcrtun, Cal., 1 I. S. ".\ " llunnrs ( 1 ). (2); Y. \\' . C. .\.; Pn:-,. Stuch•ut \ 'nlunh.•t·r Hnnd. ".\/u•'s gouu.r 1>4· 41 ,.,,g;u(•c•r /i/..·1.' Ju•r

,..,,..,..

ElliTll .\1 .\ \

.\XIlFRS0:\,1( \. (E•I.)

• lie/" Inkster. X . J> .. H. S. l .. nin:r,il) of

~urth

l>aknta.

"l'e~ ,Jj,f,'t /c"(li'<' IIDnu• to rome l&t'T"' to

school. ,fj,J .)'"• E,ff "

:'oT\:-;I.EY PIIIJ.LIPI'l, B.•\. (F.<I.) "Fii/'f' . Franklin ll. S. Junior Cia,,: Junior

frc:-a'

("umnuttt:t.•;

Prom.

Economic... Club; \\'re-..t-

ling Tc·am (.!); lla<ehall Squad (2); Football Squad. ",\'tnn

'U.'t'tlf m1d lr(t t('CU .fltJrtiug.

.fpritaJ:

could

)'O"

,,dtuol

ju.~t

-:.:11'-•u

0/r, ...\"ttw, Ito:. .....

\\'.\I.T I, Il I'LJRD\' 1,,\TOX, Jl. S. (C. I,,) ''Pt•tr" :\luuntain llomc II . S.

(:kc Club (1); t'mlct Rand (1); T•·ack S<iuad ( l ), (2): Paci lic Coast Rday C:~rnival Ul: "[" ("luh; .\ssoc•aletl Enginc.•t.•rs; Sign'lt\ .\lpha Epsilon . .. ,

.fclU'

Purt/:t• Boton

JUSt

•· Tlwt'., twtlli,.g, /';,·,• tlwt"

st•t~u

FIH;D\ El. \ .\ CORE,

"ou• om/ ,•lrplumts ,lc>

n.

S. (II. Ec.)

"Frit•' Rurl~)"

.... , ·o,,i,•r t.Jw'/1

II. :;,

.fJ't•t)l·

for

,,,..

Core.~··

PnA"e Fl fly -lh ree


Ell\\ 1'\ II"IWU<T \11-.1·.:"\. c1·:. r:.l ''I'/''

1:. :-;,

()rutitlt• If ~. ,\,-.t»e.·iattll l·:nJ.C•m:t·• ... \ tct· Prt-.. \'--.O· t·iatul ~tmlt·nto-. ,,r l.itutlc:) J ratl.

"1/,•"." lire.• J-:11.\' tlr.rt tn•trn thdt ~f::.~·••tllc.""r :~ r/h d odutc• Jttit,· cnounc/ it "

~r

\RC \HET 11 \RSCll. 1:. •\. "/ y/o•~ ~IH ..,CU\\ 11 , !-\. "\" llonor' (I), (!); l•:nl(l i'h ('lub; ~lt·mlu.· r,hip ( 'onuniHt·t.• or l·: nglish ('luh (,1) : \'. \\'. l. \ : ~ l t"ic ('lnh; (;;unm;e Phi hd.·.

1.\'f. \

'"ll'nud1•r if .flit• ;.'f •HI.\' .-t'l"tlou /c) /.• l,ila c/cr/ ;,•cts !iO luo·.~lt -:,•;d \crm.t.m • . ,

FI.IZ \BETll S \XI>I·.l.lt':->. 1:. .\ . ((ununt·n.•t·)

"/l,·tty" 11. :-\.

\ln'l'U\\

.. B .. llunor ... bt~eh-h

" \'ol ,1,/\•

(1): '',\ .. ll nnur ...

(.!)~

Unh: ,\lltha lklta. dou't lotto:~~,· cun·tllita.~ li/I&<J/,rtf. but /lt/1"

o,out

\IEHIHTT \ ', 1'1·::\\\'EI.L, 11. S. C.\1 E.) •· \lutt''

:\(u,nn\ 11 . ~ . •\ ......t•t.·iatt·tl Engith:t·r .. ; Track ~quad Cll. f!l; \\' r.·,l1inl( T,·am (~1: ~i!<· Ol!\

\lph!l l':lt..,ilon.

"/{,·',.; .\/ury'.<ti l•rotlrt•r''

Mf H l l L-:'""J 01 f XST0:--1 .-H.- s:"" (.\ g.)

".\'/wrty" .\hcrclccn 1 f. S.

r·:. f. U. Club; As· -.udatc.•d Stuclt•nt' o( l.inc-llcy llall; \-.-.uciat<'tl B:trb ....

"'""' " '''' ( I): S. " 'I nlormut;ou'

mo~!l"t~r,uliug

as au.

• lg.

IH 'II\' 1':1.1.1-:X SI'EXCER, 11.•\ . (En~tli,h )

''Huh,...

l'almht. W n.. 11 S. l'nin r•ily nf On·~o;on (1), Englt>h Club; \'. \\'. l. \. Cabinet. "'Ruh\• 1!./lt'u st•'lt'.t 'e•r timt' studywg''

J'al{e Flrty-fou•·


1:FR \1.11 J.\\11-:~ <:ILL. 1.1 .. ll. ·J~·rr ·• ~iuux F~ll•. S. I I , 11. :-. "rgonauc StatT: .. <~nn nr the :\(uun· t.1in ..... ; .?ncl l.it·ut (_ adu Battalion; Pn.· .... funwr ('Ia ...,: fra.ck (!l: ··r· ( luh: ·lk~md ("luh: lkneh ~n<l Bar: l'hi ,\lttha II Ita: Phi (:amma lldta . .. Of tltr .t/'fY;t'.( lrouutl

<a. \I I\'~

1 1.\~'l'n:. ''(;/(Jd''

a·t~lw,f''

n. ' ·

\)tu'<'n .\ nnt• I I. S .. Sea tt le. \\'n . ",\ " ll u nttr' ( 1), (2); ",\ rgonaut" Sta tT <..n: runior l'l'om Conunittt:e: Engl i'h ('lui>: .\ . S. I'. I. Secretary: Pan -ll dh:nic.• ( 'ounc-il; Exc.·cutivt~ Hoard nf \\' mntn'~ l.c..·agtH.'; ( ;irl··." \'<"II Lt•:ula (.ll: <:irl,· Ba•k~t Uall: Kappa Kappa ( ;anfma.

"lt'x 1111 "

(;,.,("

1111.11.\ '1'110\1 \S, B. \. \fo,l'U\\ II ~.. \.. llunur.. ( 1 ) . ··B.. I {,~nnr' Eul(li•h Cluh: JkSmet Uuh. ',\h~ h c'cJT" 11

Ct'ST\\'

( .?) :

lu•ort from Pullman

\, \\IEIIE,

·•c,u··

rr

S. (\g.)

\hrrcln·n H. ~•• , .• IIHtWr' (ll. C.!): Craan Cup .\g. I lay t.!>: Crain _hulging 1\·am (.l).

"(,u.t i.t

:-/!HOI \X

tl

dana,·,! goocl mau"

J. J \COliSOX,

H. .\. (Ec.)

"/llh·" Ru"' d l 11. S. EC(IIWUlit.•" t'hll ).

''Try

·~·m

oU. Ju/.;r: ~·o1,'/f makr ;,, .tomrth iug"

tt

l<l. T I I T\\ I.O R .\\ERS, R

/cttrr

.\.

''Rfl.tiU.f"

Cumhng l£. ~.. \" llunur• (I); Or~llt'stro (I): Ca-t ".\likacln": \'. \\'. L ,\,; ".\rgo· n •• uc" ~tntT (.!>: Ut·ha Gamma.

1/rr /ut:fhflllcl's a Fi1i"


TOE\'~.

I·.IC\ EST \\ \I.'I'EI<

.., .,,, ..

1:

(( nmnu.·rn·)

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·t..orrd

)ohn.'flcnl ""'' ht• ,,,.,. frmn tl~t• .fUIHt' /O'h'll''

:\. TIIO)IP~O:\. B.~. (('. E.l "/Jm·.. ll"i-.· I I. S. "I:" llmH11' (1): "\" ] l onnr' (2> : \'it'(· · P n•,, ' ''"c:iatnl EnJ.dnc.'('r"': Ph i lll'!t;o Tht•!a. \

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llmqc.• !'hi

.\IJ•I~:a.

..If ln. \orma, I tll.lu't l.·uo:, your 11w.ldlt' "'"""" fttl.t t!J.rl

l:t"FIIIHl ~.. Kl 11:\S, B ~ ( \1(,) II •f" P.attun ...tmrg. .\ln .. 1 (. S. ··n.. fl cmur.... Cl). <.?>: J>ain Catclc: J~~<IKIIIII Tt·am

\ : \g. Uuh:

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\lpha

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\lu.wwri"

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~.(.\g.)

Fnntl:nul I I . ~ . . \g. Cluh: .\ . E. F. Club: ,\,,odat~d l farh,,

''ll'cl/1. you't·c· jrurt

J.!Otfd qu1t loo~·it~'

ut otlu·r gu·l."''

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11.

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~.

.. \" ll•nwr' (1) . (..?): EngJi,h Club: \'. \\". ('. .\ .: Tr~hlt- Cld Club (1). .?) :

Cummiuc-t·

of

Fort)~

. _\IJ•ha

llcha. ''I b,•cllfJ .lgn(".f must study o:xful lltJrd"


TII0.\1 \S

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\IUJ SPEEDY. H. S. (.\gr. l

"T0111'

Kichfid•l JJ S. Trt·:l.... \g. ("luh; ~t.·cy. Tn:a.... '''oci· ah:tl l~arlh; ''(:t.·m of tht· ~fountain-.": Junior Prtlm ("ummittt·t•: ~\l1•ha Zeta. ~, Jumuu, c1

J:,ft,·cJrd, S/'<'<'d_l•,

d

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1101

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t,;(){;,\R P.\ Y:\ 1,, B. S. ({'h~m.

E.)

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llni.se 1 I. S. ".\ " llunnrs (1). (2) . (,l): p,.,.,, Tun · ior ( 'l~s': uc:l'lll (){ the ~[nuntain ..... : J·: thannl So<'i<·ly: ~lilitnry Ban<l: . \'· ...uriah:cl E ngim.'t'r': Engli ... h Cluh. '',IJJ

curimalt•d rltttminJI cquclliou"

, \LET\ r.1n:Ei\'E. If. .\, O!u-ic) "/)('t'' .\lhinn JI S . ..\lhiun Stah· Xnrmal; Kappa ..\Jph:t Th<·ta. '"ll()'h )C1 KCH1n4 IN"l'/' la..·r aou1.)' from

lh,.• {d,.m" J."IES \\ . F\IWEI.l. 1l S. (For.) ''Jim' n..;.,,. 11. s. HI! .. llunnr' (I); .. (;tm of the ~Iuuntain•;'; St:cy.·Trea........\ ... -.ndat~l For· (',tcr': \·icc:-Prc,, .\ ..."iiciatc~l Fnrt·s· t<·r, CJl; lkSm~t ("Juh: Xi S1gma Pi : Phi c;amma llelta.

"J;m J..·,wt~'.'f

f"t't'f)' ~:irl 011

tltr camtu~'f"

\1.0:'\ZO \\ . .\1 .\RTII\. B.S. ( Chem.l

"Solomon., Coeur tl' .\lc n<" 11. S. \'sm:iatt,•d Engim.·cr:-;; .\ssociat..-•1 llarh<. ''."'~,,fm1unt!

H 'lwt's iu a tt..'TIHC." 11

Jo:\ \l>X \ 'I \Y IWin: wrs. 11, .\. ••1•t·ud'"

\"ampa 11, S. \£u,ic Cluh~ l~mtnm1·c, Cluh: Engli'h ("Juh; Jla,k~lhall: Kappa Ka(>i>a c;amma.

Page

1 ~1 fty -se,·en


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TII0\11'!'>0:\.

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\\hat cum II S Bdlint:h:un. \\ n., !'t.'C'). J lunH. Ecunom· , •. , Cluh Ll). \ \\ ('. .\, ('ahinct (.11: lta'""'"ll 1.!1: Phi L'l"ilcm ( hnit.·rnJ 1\:apJ•a Kapp.t (~amma. •• \hr".< {

It

11

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mry sort of

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lii.\IU.E:-> !'>l \1:\HR .\1.1. .\101. 11 .• \. ldahu Tc.·•,:hU14,;~a1 Jn,lltUtt.'. EnKii .. h Club: Fnrum.

''II it!. cJ uttmt• /tL•c.• lladl, Clwrhs, you':•t• Jr'-a

or

uaturtrlly /!flltd ht• c1 sulflit•r d bt•l.tlac:·rL· or .wmt•O,;,•g''

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"II dl. dU)'t,•cr,\', I criu't Jr;.th ..

Rl'lrY \1 \1{11·: II{\ 1:\(:. 1:••\. RuJ>e:rt I I ~. CurndJ (uJit-gc (1), c.n: ··1r· llcmors c I I: ( lmqca l'hi .\lpha. '"\/u•'.( Cuf' .f;."t••r"'


P \l'J. T

IW\\ El.L. II. S. (.\ g.) "!'. T." T.t·'' i'ton l J. S.

• \" llonc>r- (1), (,Z). (3): J\u,ine" 'lanager 19!2 '"G~m of the ) [oun· tain'': Ca1•1. Cadet Ilanalion; K. 0. T. C. l! iflc Tt·am; Engli'h Cluh: .\ g. Club: \lpha Zt·t:t: P hi Gamma Delta. "ll"onc/rr

(' II J( fS

if

hr «•ill •·•

\\'E ISC EJ( IIE J( ,

n. .\ .

(Commerce) "Chris" Lc.•w i!'ltcH'I 1 1. S .

Ph i I l,•lta T h<•ta. ''Thl·J·r·., 'h1i.tdom iu /,;.t JHtmt•, ttl ll'tuJ"

EI!:'\EST

'r.

1>\\'0 R.\ K, B. S. (.\<{.) "F. lf."

Longmont. Colo.. ll. S. ••(;t.:m nf tht> )fountain...,"; .\g. Cluh; ,\g. Club Program Commillce (1l; Engli'h Club; lfcla Theta Pi.

• 1/onr.<t, firnnt , clors tlwt JI. stand for marridgc* f''

In.l'l. \ II EST II ER ll \\ IS. 11. .\. "/loc.!J" l.c:l\'tl.,ul, Cole>., 11. S. '" (:em uf til<' .\ l omllall""; .\IJ>ha Jklta. "1/rr mo.d

rcu-ur.~tf

dt.tin• i." o /1rta piu"

\RTIIl ' lt n :UILIO: Y.\ GC Y, B. ,\ . Nn mJla 11. S. J'''' ior l'rom ('mnmit tt•t•; English Ch1h ; Ec<l nomics ('lub; -.\ ssociated Fores· lc.•rs.

", /, otiH••· of /hr Niclt·nlcaocg/c /1oys"

\\ ll.f.l \~1 1-:. II \Mli .T OX, B.S.(.\ g.) "lftlm"

Kamiah 11 . S . .. ( ;t.:m o( the.· ' rountnlns"; .\ lt. nair)' Jud~ting Tt·am (3); .\ g. Club; ·' ""' <iatt<l Harl.... " If bot<' tiu a11d n·o:·y huir 7-on/d kill, '/'Icc gcrls t<'OIIId all be d"ad br<aii$C of /Iii/."

• Page Fltty- nine


~\LBE1<1

ST \Xf..t:\ U.\XIELS. B. ~(Fon·,tryl ''/)4JIIU,\"

l!~y

City, \lich .. )1. ~•·tr· llunor ... (1). (2'>: Pre .... ~\..,.,.ociated Furc ... h.•r... : lk~met Club; Pin <:amm:t I><· Ita. 4 '

Euz!u~t.J ''"' CJ tt'cJIIflf!r{ul butler ·a.'/u•ra /J.uun· t'lwsc.• • lmcric'd j'or his uoti:·,• ,·ouulr\•''

.\LFI~Ef)

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BRH~ I I \~[. B. ~­ (,\go·.) "JlriJ(." ~lnscnw II. S. "'B" fluowr' (.!); .\g, Cluh; (:Icc C'luh tl), Ul. {,1); \"ociatcd Harh,.

"Un",: ,·cunc• to

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d

J .\\11·::-- 1! R \ \ '\ I Ll-:1~. 11. S.

(C'. E. l

4

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Han•l: EnKh'h Club: 1-:nJ(ntt·t•r ... ; Tltt· El\\eta~.

}a11

,,..ociatctt

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IIEI.EX

1·.1.17. \llETII

,1011:\STO:'\.

11. ,\, '//do•n" 11. S. ",\"' lluouor' (1), (.!); Y. \\', C. .\. Cabinet Ill. (J); ('a,t "The ,\ma· 7on,··. ••(_'Ju,e tht Bnuk'': Engli'h ( luh; Om<·ra Pho .\IJoha. " \ .') f.tliYif til t/ai.f {cWli(\•'' ~tn.. ro\\

\\ .\1. KEITI I

I I ORI\1:-iC~.

11. S.

(~ l ining)

"Keirlo" l.incnl11 11. ~ .. Portland, Ore'. ~c..·cy. ·TH':-1'. ,\l\~ncinh.'d )iint•rs; Trca"i .\. 1·:. F. ('luh; H(:l'm o)( 1hc )[oun· tain..,": Phi (;amma D•·lt<.L

''.\o, Aritl1,

.\'U u

(/idu't grt by a·ta/1"

J.Y).; \\ ~:~T ~.\SII, H.,\. (C'ommcrcd ,_l~yn''

Onci<la .\ca<lcmy, Pre, ton. Idaho. l 'tah \gricultural Coll~ge. "ll" llonnr' (3); Economoc' Club; Phi c;amma })eJta.

<.n.

••com .... on

L."''"·

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llair looJ.·s uicl'

t'UOJig/a''

Pnge Sixty


P \l"L .\f \I{\ IX J-:1 Ll~. H. ~.

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(Pre \lt'lic) ''/, ,., Eng' m. On.·. 11 S : Cui' er ... it) of ()n·gnn.

Urum \laior C,1d c B.ilt,l: 21111 Lic.·••t R ll T. C: l'rc-·~le•lic Club. fhi

(;amma llc,:lta.

•· let•, ol'

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m.rjor

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1u~·c·r

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11.111. ''}[f

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liC'idtor 011(('.

/'fc· dl'c' trotcYfc•d b.\' cl sf'ccicr/ trot·idc•ucc•"

('OPI~I. \:-\ll B. \. "( <>t•·" Currc."<.'liuunllc.·. ln\\D, 11 ~

1.1 0\'ll ('1.1:'\TO:\

l"'nhc.•r,lty nf lu\\, !'hi lldt.1 Tht ta. •·J(~ """'' 11'.-<1

tlwt'.< all II I! 1110;~ about him''

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Hui.,e II. S. l.ic.•ut. Caclc.•t Battalion: Trc~ts. Junuw ('):~...,,: Et•Hnomit•"' ('luh: Phi (;·,mm·' lh•lto. "I'll ldl lht• h'orld I ft, •. t•

l' \IH. \\'II.Bl'l<

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( \g.) "Jalw lle~rY\'m(tr·._~· Burky II. S. (;ra1u .fucl'(ing T4:am; .\g. Cluh: ..\-..-.. ,.. l'lah·<l Bad> ... • /) 1f1

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Page Sixty-one


ELI.fOT \\"EIR E.\YES. JR., B'.•\. (Commerce) "Buster·~

Lewiston H. S. ",\" llonors (1) . (2); Economics Club: Phi Ddta Theta. "EIIiot'.<~t

gouuo i>c n big uuua some clay''

IH('Jl.\RD .\. FOX. B. S. (.\g.)

"Ritlr" Nezperce IT. S. \'ice· Pr·es. of Sophomore Clas,: •\g. Club: DeSmet Club: '')'' Club: Secy.· Tr·eas. .\thletic Hoard: Basketball (2). (J): Baseball (2); Football Squad (I). (3): Phi Gamma Delta. "Irma's Ridr-ns Rr'cla cou be"

R.\LPil R. ROWELL. B. S. (.\g.)

"Rapid" Lewiston ll. S. •·.\" flonors (1). (2), (3); Second Prize llort. Contest. '19; 2nd prize Dairy Contest, '20: Treas.• \~. Club: English Club : .\ lpha Zeta: Phi Gam· ma Delta. ".1 /engtlts disc-ourse

011

man''

(;J·:XE\'IF. \ 'E JO);J::S. B. S. ( I I. Ec.l

uccn Palouse. \\'n., 11. S . S llOkanl' C1uversity . ".\" Honors (ll: "I~" lfonors (2): Y. \\'. C. .\.: Ilome Economics Club: Phi t•psilon Omicron: Omega Phi .\IJ>ha. 11

".~·ltc' s

a nafii.'r tlouglttcr"

.\RTIIl'R TR\'T:-\C S.\\\'\'E R , (1':. E.l

11. S.

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Rupert II. S . . \-.sociatccl Engineers: '1'rcas. . \ssoci· atc.·d En~u1eers: Vicc·P1·es. .\ssoci · ale:(( n~u·bs . .. f .~o-.,• l'cr·.

Tom. totltrr

If 'it/a Eilte/

ho·wjaget tlwt ·way .1 "

lien

.\LFI<ED L. .\);DE.I<SOX (Owm. 1·:.\ ''Audy''

)[oscow II. S. "B" llonors (I);".\" Honors (2): ,\,. sociatcd. Engineers; Ethano l Society. "Tirey tell me Alfred L. irr chemistry 1.\· 'bout r!•c suwrtc.d guy tltcy f$. by ga

Page

~ixty - two


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I.< I!" IS ("1.\' 1>1·: ( \l l \". B. S. <l"h<·m.l ".I uuui\rs'' )(U!'\(0\\ 11. s. •• \ " llnnu r ' (I); l•:th:tnul Soc ict) : Fn•..,hman Track ·r l·am; Stgma •\ J. lllta l•:l).,ilc•••· "l.t•t'.~

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Page Se,路enty-e!ght



HreJOiu:aro, Cnmmin"i

Collin< \\"ylancl

\\"ells Tipton

l l t-rscy

\l o1ie

Sophomore Class Officers First .'icmrstcr

.'iccond Semester

Lynn F. J lcrsey ______ _____ ___ President_ __________ lloward Breshear s Greek \\"el ls _______________ \ "icc-pr csidcnr_ _______ _____ E. E . \\"ylancl Robert Cumm ins _____________ See~ ctary --- ------ _______ [\eth el Colli ns Doris Tipton ---- --- _____ _____ Trea;-;urcr_ __ __ __------ __ Esther

Page Eig-hty

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Page l<;lghty-one


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\\'allac.c Furre~o.t ~berry

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l.cuch I Ienning

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(;o.Jdard Ston~man Babcock }. llro"n O>troot WOO<ls Holbrook I.. Collin, .\ndcrton Cbaponan Chambcri:Un D. Cag~ Steadman E. WolkinllOn Baumann Hatfield Litton Tiernc:y ~(otic Sampson Pitcairn R. R. Johnson Hepton McRoberts A. Fox G. Bro"n Summer"' Plummer Garver

.\.

:\ley~r

)(ill~r

Sherry

Page E igh ty-five



D5H Page Eighty-seven


B.:tkcr Harth:u

Freshman Class Officers Firs/ \ones/a

.'>c•cond Scmcslc·r

llarold Cornelison ________ ____ President___________ L) nn Rogers Lynn l~ogcr:-. ____________ __ \ -ice- Pres idcn t_ ____________ .Geo rge naker El\ a \\'ilkinson _______________ Secretary ---------------- Fairy Sanger 1·:1 izahcth nartletL-----------Treasurer _______ --------- 11 carl Stalker

Page Eigh ty-eigh t


1~. John,ton :\lcll.oberh ll.. \\'ilkill'o(lll Sheldon

Summer-..

:\lorri>

:\le:\lartin Roice ]. Phillit>Pi Drake II. ]one' llaycroft

Hamlin lfaird E. Clark 'forgan \\'ickward ~hepard

P. Stalker I :\lohler Christie Tave:-t Tallman Johnson

F. Pt.·trrloo{U\

lluffman Orford C. CarJ,on .\. Hill

llawe' lla•brouck Scott Schugh :\lanfull :\ladlingcr

Page Jillghty-nlne


Remsbel'g !->tevcns

Staples Haymond Donaldson ~-Green

Page Ninety

Cox Leitzky c;. Jacobson Wicks 11. Patterson Bjork

Ilcrr (;ngson Keith I Janna .\ . Anderson ).1. 'f'urner

~anger

.\nclerson

Brown

(;~unby

(;ardner

~imonson

i:'\ewman

\Yildman

Donovan ~Iadar

~ChOOflO\'er ~1. ~lacey

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Darnall I. Brown nurlc.-..on Xcwm:tn Trautman \ 'an Gilse

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,\, Xero Rern•berg

P nge Ninety-on e


Leithe Robertson .\!bright Dean :\(offatt .\nderson

Page Ninety-two

L.

~{arlin

~reeks

Armstrong

Rartlett Kimberling 0. Nelson

Throckmorton ~!iddleton

Cooper Long

Burbidge Neelan Griepe Kingston

R. Smith Redmond Corteau

Cord Jenson Stroebel Whitenack Casebolt Green

Stone A. Cox Brasfield Kendrick Lester F lit ncr


Konold

~Iusser

I. Richards Cogan :\1. .\nnbruster \·. Peterson

G. Baker White Nelson .\loore l~oscoe Franz Carson

Bain Bedwell :\IcKinley Case 13eauchamp

S. Johnson

CamJ)bell Osborn e Billings l. Richards L. Nason Stidwcll

Carscallan ~ 1. Collin> D. Kuhns Telfor<! B. Smith \an

Ta~sel

Stewart Guerin Schre•ber C. Nason Robt. 1;ranz Lon1mel

Page Ninety-three


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~I. Lim c Coble) Barnhart

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Pag(' Ninety-five


~cymour

Uru..,

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Xylant!er \l cCault)路 Parry

1'age Ninety-:;路 x

O"l~ork'

Par ... 'lns .\. Ficke ::;,i,.ers

:=ht:neberger \\"hitc :-.vangler <~arlock

) l cGratiJ Baird .\. lr. \\"allace Perry

Farmin Tat<路 :\hnnt:au

( hubb..ck

II. Pa)ne \htttr \\"illiam,on Bennett Xugglt路 \\'il(\man


Page Nin e t y-seven


P age N:nety- eight


MILITARY Page Nlnety-nin&


M ILITARY DEPARTMENT ~ ILJT.\RY training :!t the Cni,·er:-;ity i"' at the prc:-;cnt time more ~ t·fficient and better o rganized than ever bdon•. (;cncral Chri5man. who took charge oi the department in tht• iall nf l<J20. has rcmoddt•d it thoroughly. Tht· Cadet nattalion has been placed on a so und footing. with l'quipment and in structors for ::til phases of militar) \\'ork that arc t•nc<Hln lert•d by an Tnfantry unit. For in struction in thc:-;t• ,·arious lines. ( ;cneral Chrisman has brought together a corps of assistants capable of handling any contingency. Early last fa ll. :\ lajor Ralph !Iarrison, C. .\., ca me to the department and ga\'e th em the benefit of his wide t•xperiencc and knowledge of army problems as he met them here in the l'nited ~tates and o,·erseas during the war. :\lajor !Iarrison is at prt•"'cnt a\\ay on lca,·e. his place being capahl~ filled hy :\fajor Frank ~loan.

In dirt•ct command oi the Cadet Battalio n is :\lajor ll omt•r I ludel"on. a graduate oi our l'niversity \\ ho saw acti,·e sen icc as a Captain in thc Infantry o,·er,ea:-;. To his effort, is largl'l) due it.... creditable.: ... ho\\'ing. .\s"'isting in the :\lilitary De 1>artment arc ~gl. l~ugene ;\avclc. in charge oi office work. and Sgh. Lonie \\ ood, and .\nton Dahlen. in charge oi all Go,·ernment -.upplic"' and accompanytng "capons. .\11 oi these men ha,·e had long \rm~ experience in the work thl') arl' handling and round o ut an efficient corp". This ~ t•ar the <Hh·anccd cour:-;e for .Juniors and ~cniors has become much more popular than e,·er before. :\lore applications for this work ha'e been recei' ed than could be accommodated. La"'t sun11ner's training camp at Camp Kearny. Cal. . which was commanded h) General Chrisman. g-a,·c practical instruction in latest militar) methods to a number of Idaho Cadets. This class of instruction is now being given the t•ntirc Cadet 1\attalion. and with the training a still larger number "ill recei\'c this summer at Camp Lewis. \\'ash .. the \\'ork should continut• t'\ en more efficiently than it no\\' is.

Thl· .\I ilitary Department of the l'ni,·er..,it)' is \cry fortunate in ha,·ing- as its head Ceneral Chrisman. \\'hn ha.., gi\'en it the benefit both of his long experience and hi~ up-to-date knn\\'k<lg-e of tactics as the) are practiced today.

Page One Jlnn<lred


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Ju:-.tin D. Gowen. Jr.. 1st Lieut. ~igurd L. Sampson. 2nd Lieut.

Thurl) n

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Captain.

COMPANY "C' Cerald \\路. Friedman. 2nd Lil路ut. \\ . C. Carpenter. 1-.t ~ergt.


Page One Hun<lre<l and Six


ATHLETICS



THE ATHLETIC CALENDAR J-c< HE Department of Physical Educa(on entered upo:1 this ye:u·'s \...) prog-ram with the determination to stre-,-, two main factors in her departmental work: ( )ne to place the l'. oi I. a thktics intercolleg-iatcly in the po:->ition that she belongs. and s(condly to lay a great deal oi stress upon intra-mural and inter-class competition. The depart ment is also great!) concerned with the moral phase of athletics and gi,·es it the necessary emphasis for the uphuilding of the gentleman athlete. Our year. although one of ordinar) success. spells much for the future of the l'ni\ crsit) ·~ .\thletics and the reorganization of the Cni,·ersity .\lumni and their acti,·e interest in the Cni,·ersity will be one oi the chici factors in our future growth. • During the first hali of the year Idaho broke C\ en \Yith \\'. S. C. on the diamond. "hile in the Xorthwest Conference Track :\feet she finished a close third. Our football season showed some impro,·ement over previous seaIdaho won four games during the season and lost to \ V. S. C., 14-7. and Oregon, 13-7. During the season J daho scored 75 points, while her opponents scored 48. ~ons .

The basket-ball championship oi the north" est was lost by OtH' game. Oregon won the ~.:m·eted honor with I da:10 fini~hing second . .-\side from tlw major sports the "rcstling team dcsen·e.~ honorable mention ior ib work during the past s<.•ason. ln time 1t!aho "ill ht• looked upon as a contender for high honors in this branch oi !'port. interest in tennis will probably be much greater this year than ll"otal as we ha'e :-.chcduled matches with the l"niversity of Cal ifornia, \\". S. C. and \\'hitman College. If the team make" a creditable shcming- in these matchc,., there is a probahilit~ that thl'Y will rcpre"cnt the L'ni\'ersity at tlw "-:orthwlst lnter-collcgiat<.· .\feet . . ome time in :\fay. 1'110.\I.-\~

KELLEY.

Page One Hundred and Seven


A. J. PRIEST Graduate Manager

"H.\HE" R'ROWN Wrestl ing

Page One Hundred and Eight

CO.\CH :\lc:\IILL.\1'\ llasketball, Baseball, Freshman Football CO.\CH KELLEY Director of .\thletics Football and Track "CHICK'' E\" ANS Freshman Rasketball

llOYDE CORNELISOX Graduate :\lanagcr

PERCY O'HRIEX P.oxing


CAPTAIN FELIX PLASTINO "Center of the team in t'\"Cry ,...Cihe oi th(' \\ o:-d. l daho is losing- one oi the he:-l foot hall men ~he eYer had."'

Pnge One ll undr路ed nntl Nine


"(;RO\'E''

~:\'.\XS-lUCTIT

EXD

Caj>t;liu-clrct.

He wa.., alway.~;; in the right place to grab

a long, high pa,s.

"JOE'' \\'11

lTCO~lB

RT\.llT H.\LF

..\!though handicapped hy inluries during mo ... t of the season, he c.ohowed up remarkably

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"llt:CK" llRF.S I I F..\R S- FULLfl.\CK

"] luck" was always t here at the right timt•, and in a manner our opponents didn't soon forget.

"BE.\NY" JrR£SII£.\R S- Q1J.\RTER Just because you don•t see his picture is no reason he was not one of the best quarters in the Conference. li e left his footprints all over Whitman and ~fontana and his generalship at Boise was without a peer.

Page One Hundt·ed and Ten


"GCS" IH\ II\(;

LEFT 11 \LF

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"PEORO'' N:,\RSOX .\lwayo;;, full u£

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and gingt·r .

Page One Hun•l:·e I an I Ele,·en


~\ man \\]H•m ''C look towar•l tu tl I Pl.l ...t} houto..

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~t XI } tar \' will be one uf tht• br-.t in the: ( t•nCtn·nn

" \I~ IC\"

Page One Hundred ant! 1'wel\e

1'.\TUl

;;l"llEXII


FRED SCIDllD-Svfi·T.\CKLE lit shu\\t·•l tht re~l fight.

··J I W' :\ E.\1.- RIGllT lit' tail.

to<~k

the fir,t kink out of the

" 11.\11 1•:" lllW\\'N

Tlw

t~C.\R D

h~r<l<-st

Cuu~:ar·,

U:FT EXD . \:\ D FULL

tackling man in the Confer·

<"llCc.'.

Pn~<'

Onl' Jlundl'ed and Thirteen


.. IUCII.. If t

put~

FOX

SlJir EXIl

a11 he ha... tnlo

111

\::unc.

\11 he need.!- is a little mon· \''Jh.'l' it.·nce .

.. J:JU;· P.\RK:" II\ \\orke,i hard and

Sl"H Cl \Ril \\C:

lc~nk

i,•

him to

'hu\\ up nc:xt year.

.. I'I·:TE.. B.\RTO I h··, tall, but he h its

.. II ERB..

Sl! 11-"1" \CK 1.1·~m

TIHHIS<l:--'

h:tnl.

Sl"lr 1: \I K

cnn'<'ientiou... workt:r

.. ST \:\ .. PIIILLIPP! lit· gaw them all he h:ul.

Page One Hundrl'<l and Fotll"l\'l'll

:'Wt:.t·::-11>


THE FOOTBALL SEASON

Football started out this year with a new lease on liie under the able tutelage of Coach Kelley. Practice began with more than thirt) men out in uniform, nine of whOtll were letter men.

W. S. C.-OCTOBER 15 Jdaho began the season at the heav.) end oi the schedule \\·hen she met \Yashington State in what prO\ ed to be one oi the hardest fought grid ba ttlcs ever \\ it nessed on :\ [cLean Fie lei. .-\ ftcr the first iew minutes of play Breshears broke through the Farmer's line, blocking a pass and allowing :\cal to pick it otT and score for a touch-down after a sensational run of fifty yards. J rving kicked goal, leaving the score 7-0 at the close of the first half. \V. S. C. scored two touchdowns during the second half, kicking goal in each case. Idaho's stubborn resistance with \\' . S. C. right under the goal posts pre\ en ted further -;coring. Idaho played sensational ball throughout the game. with In·ing and .\. nrcshears playing the leading role-;. OREGON-OCTOBER 23 The thirteenth annual grid contest with the Uni\·ersity of Oregon was taken by the \\'eb Footers with a score of 13-7. The celebrated "jinx" showed up within the fir"t six minutes oi play when Brown of Oregon picked up a fumbled ball and ran forty yards for a touchdown. In the second quarter Oregon scored her second touchdown. kicking goal. i\fter a series of shift plays and line plunges. in the fourth quarter "Beany" Breshears went thru the line for Idaho to a touchdown. Irving kicked goal. The game wa!> characterized by brilliant playing and was a scrap from beginning to end. :\luch spectacular playing was done by both teams. MONTA NA - NOVEMBER 20 ln the best played game of the year Idaho walked thru :\fontana':; line to a score of 20-7. I d.aho was prevented from putting the ball across the line for a touchdown during the first half. But Jn•ing came to the rescue with two field goals kicked from placement at the forty yard line. ~fontana came back sho\\'ing fight the second half. ln the third quarter ~fontana fumbled a punt whi('h was recoYered by Idaho. In·ing made a long pa-;s to Evans. "Beany" Breshears then put the ball over the line in short order. Irving kicked goal. A few minutes later "Butch" Nagel recovered a blocked punt on :\fontana's 25 yard line. "Huck'' Br eshears and "Babe" 11rown then tore the :\fontana line into shreds. Babe going O\·er for a touchdown. Irving kicked goal. i\Iontana 's speedy quarter got away and pushed the ball across for a touchdown. :\fontana kicked goal.

Page One Hundred and Fifteen


WH ITMAN-OCTOBER 30 O u t-clas~in g t hei r opponents at every turn of t he game, Idaho's Grid \\'arr iors trampled on \ Yhitman to the effect of 2 1-7. Captain Pla~tino intercepted the first pass tried by \Yhitman, and the Idaho Bacb took the ball down the field on an uninterrupted march. :\ pa:-:- from In·ing to .. Bean}·· Brc~hears resulted in the fir;-;t touchdo\\ n for Idaho. In·ing kicked goal. .-\fter recci,·ing the kick-off from Idaho the ~Iissionaries attempted a pass which \\as again intercepted by ··Plastic''. A pass from In·ing to ·· Beany .. netted the second touchdown for the SiiYer and Gold. lrYing kicked goal. .-\t the opportune moment Grove E,·an:- reached out and recovered a \\' hitman fumble. allowing '·Heany'' to crash thru the \ \'h itman line ior the third touchdown. Irving kicked goal. \\"hitman's line touchdown came in the fourth quarter when a \\'hitman end secured the bal! on a blocked punt and ran twenty yards for a touchdown. \\'hitman kicked goal. UT AH-NOV EMBER I I Befo:-e a crcl\\ d of m·cr 7.000 fans Coach Kelley's warriors defeated the L:ni,·ersity of l'tah .\ggregation hy a ;.,Core ~f 10-0 in the annual inter-conference game on the Boise Fair grounds. :\either team ~wrcd in the first half, tho the Idaho delayed buck took her within striking distance of l'tah's goal sc,·eral times. "\fter se,·en minutes of play in the third quarter Irving's toe booted the pigskin for a fh:ld goal from the twt·nt~ -eight yard line. Tn the la.::t few minute,., of the third quarter. with rn ing and \\' hitcomb car

Idaho. 7-\Y. _. C., 1+.

Page One Hundred an ·l

~IMeen


rying the ball on split bucks, combined with several s uccessful passes, Idaho marched down the field to Utah's ten yard line. \\' ith six yards to go on the fourth down, Irving dropped a short pass to ''Huck'' Breshears, who went across for a touchdown. irving kicked goal, g iving Idaho the long end of the 10 to 0 score. The game proved to be a punting duel between "Gus" Irving oi Ida. and "Spot" L're of Gtah . Irving coming out ,·ictorious. lndi,·idual honors of the game were divided among In·ing and \Yhitcomb of the backfield on defensive and Captain Plastino, ;...; cal and Pat Perrine for their defensi,·e playing.

GONZAGA-NOVEMBER 2 7 In the fina l game of the season the Silver and Gold aggregation added another scalp to their belt by defeating the Irishmen 10-7 at Spokane. Gonzaga almost scored a touchdown before the Idaho warriors warmed up. But in the second half, with Irving, \\'hitcomb and the two Breshears under full steam the ball was carried down to Gonzaga's five-yard line. The sons of Erin annexed se,·en points in a touchdown and goal and I n·ing of Idaho retaliated with a field goal from the 3.1-yard line. \Yith ·'Grove" Evans a:-. field general and ''Tom " Kelley to teach them the game next year's ele,·en will be heard from. The Silver and (~old needs material. You men of Idaho-take advantage of this opportunity-come lo rdaho-and play footbal l.

Idaho. 10-Utah, 0.

Page One Hundred and Seventeen


Page One ll.und•·etl ."n<l " Eighteen


CAPTAIN "SQUINTY" HUNTER Guard "Captained the 1917-18 and 1920-21 team~. Forward three years and guard this year. \fade all-:\ orth west in both positions. l daho is losing- one of her greatest basketball gencrab. 路~quinty' scored the highest number or points ior the Yandals.''

PaE:"e One H undr ed and N ineteen


•·nCLLET" FOX

(;t.; \RD

c..ptaill·rlut •·nullet" got going with a zip this <cason and he lc>Uk~tl "' gc>Ucl they eh.-<:tc<l him Cat>· tain.

Strong tlt·fl'n,ivc player

\\no;

n "wit'' ln

breaking up pia)·'· Shifted from guard tO center ancl got the jump the biggest ;hare or the tnne.

"LE:->" ~[o-.t

tioncrl

\10~:

'CII-..ational

a...

an

of

FOI{\\ \RI>

the: \"anclal....

all-~orth"t''t

nHU\

thi...

){en-

year.

Exceptionally fa,t Starrc~l ,.,pcciall) on the \\'hitman·'lont:ana trip.

"\I."

FO~

FOR\\'.\Ril

Captain of Ja,t year's F"n•-.h h.•:un. \\on a place a_., f()r\\anl with the \'nrsity. .\n ahlt: Ooor '{C;'IH,•n•l two yt·ars tu go.

"l'ETE' '

\\ )'\[.\;-\

FOR\\' \RJ>

Broke into th< game 1n the middle of tht• •ea,on. ~crapp<~l tht• ball all the time an•l j, a gn''"l 'hot.

Page One Hundred and Twenty


"GEXE" liYDE-GU.\IH>

Played guard on the 1917-18 championshiJ> team and came back this year to fight for Idaho.

".\DE"

NET.~ON-FORW.\IW

Only played a few minutes or th< sea<on. An exceptional •hot. B'ack next year and we CX)>ect him to win a regular berth.

"BILL" G.\RTI::-\-GU.\1{0

.\ smashing guarcl tall, rangy, and 10 tbe game all the time. \\'ill be in line for a reg. ulnr

po..~ition

next year.

"OZ" Tl ro:-1 !'SON-CENTER

Fi"t year on the \'arsity. Jlrokc· into the game in the midclle of the '""""'· Ideally built for center. Played a gOO<! game on th~ Coa't trip. ~rueh is expc:cle•l or him next year.

''OSTY" OSTR,\NDER- FOR\\'ARD .. \ whirlwind wht"ncver he got in the game.

He'll make 'em st<·p for a place next year.

PaKe One Hundred and Twenty-one


THE BASKET BALL SEASON

0

L'T oi t wenty-thrcc game;- played but four were lo ... t- three oi thcst• by one tally. In scoring ldaho towered far aboYe her riYals. making 625 points to her opponent::;' 419. Captain l l unter wa.,; high point man ior the \ ' andal agg-regatio n of hoopster;-. making 211 points. and com·erting 89 o ut of !53 free thro\\ :-.. ~Ioe wa-. "runnerup" with 116 points and 23 safctie;- out of 30 tos,;;es. .\1 Fox and ''\\'ild Bill" Carder were next in line with 70 and .13 indi,·idual tallies respectively. Two men . .--\1 Fo x and \\'yman. made ,-arsity letters for the first time in basket ball. The team will be greatly "eakened next ) ear by the passing- of the Yeterans "Lc-." ~Joe and '·Squinty" llunter• and ''\\'ild Hill" Carder. Coach David ~[c~l illan had plenty of good material to choose from and Idaho was ne,·er in danger of being crippled through the loss of men. Hunter, ~Ioe. " .\1'' and "Rich" Fox. Bill Carder. \\"n11an, Hvde. Thomp:::.on and :\ebon were the men most used during the. ;-caso n. · Idaho opened the season about December 16 on the home floor of the Potlatch Athletic Club with a 39 to 7 Yictory. January third the Vandals walloped the S .. \. :-\. C. in Sookanc 3<)-7 and a week later put the skids under them fo r a 39-20 defeat. January 13 "·as unlucky for Idaho. \\'. S. C. won-19 18. but the following night lost to the Vandals. 22-1-t On the \\'hitman trip of January 27-8 the games both came Idaho's way and February -+ and 5 witnessed a bear-killing scene on Montana's floor. One week later the Vandals journeyed across the line for a third set-to with the Cougars, defeated them and repeated the performance the following night on

Page One Hundred and Twenty-two


the home Roor. The \Yillamette ganH' was close fast. rough and won b,· the \"andals. • February 17 the Vandal:-; left for the fateful coast trip. They divided honors with 0. 1\. C. and lost to Oregon University and the hopes ior the championship went glimmering. The :\Iultnomah Cluh prond an easy 'ictim to tlw <~em Stater ..... . \iter a \Yeek's rest the \ "andab took two games irom \\' hitman, .:\farch 3 and ..J., and di\·icle<l honors with the nruins 011 the following two nights. Ort>gon"s \\"t>bfooters took the Conference championship and the \ -andab came clo. . c second. The rt>cord oi conference games is as folio'' s: Jan. 1..............,.. ......... Idaho 1~ .. . ...................... \V. S. C. Jan. H... . .... .............. ... Idaho 22 ... .............. ... .W. S. C. J an. 27.... .. ......... .......... Idaho 2:1.. .... . . .... .. .. Whitman Jan. ~'>.... .. .. ... ..... .. Idaho :w .. .... ........ Whitman Feb. 4.......... ............. ... . Idaho ~ 1. . ............ ••• .Montana l•'eb. 5................................ Idaho 22.. . ............................ Montana Feb. 10.............................. Idaho :!6 .............. .. .W. S. C. F'eb. lL ... ·-······ ............... .Idaho 29 . ......... .... ..w. S. C J<'eb. H ....... .. . ............. Tdaho 2:1 . ........ ...... Willamette Feb. 18............................. Idaho 2:1 ... .............. .0. A. C. F eb. 19......... ..................... Idaho 2!1.. . ... ........... 0. A. C. Feb. 20.......... ................. .. Idaho l!l ................... Oregon U. Feb. 22... . ......... ...............Idaho 19... .................... Willamette Feb. 23............................... Idaho 30.... ... ......... ....... :\lultnomah Feb. 26...... . ... ............. ... Idaho 41 . .Gonzaga Mar. 1.................................. .Idaho 29..... .................. .. ... Whitman Mar. 2.... ........................... Idaho 26 ............................. Whitman Mar. 4.................................. .Idaho 42... .................... .. . ... Montana Mar. 5...... ................ Idaho 26... . ......... Montana TOTAL: Idaho, :;27: Opponents. :161.

19 14 17 12 13 1.5 28 2.3 17 24 13 31 18 7 13 20 15 22 38

Individual scores for the conference games were: Hunter, 211; :\Joe. 116; A. Fox. 70: Carder. 52; R. Fox, 42; \Vyman. 40; ITyde, 12: :-relson. 12: Thompson. o: Perrin e. 2: O!'trander, 2.

THE TEAM l ~ lra ··squinty'' TTt1nter (Captai n)........... .................. Guard Richard "Bullet" Fox (Captain-elect) ................ Guard Leslie ''Les" ~foe _ ...Forward \\.illiam "\\"ild Bill'" Carder .. . ...........Center \Yard "Pete" \\'yman ............................................................Forward Alex "AI" Fox............ ............................................................... Forward Eugene "Gene" 11 yclc .................................................................. Guard Oswald "Oz'' Thompson ...... ····~- .................... .........Center Eugene "O~tie"' Ostrander _ .....Forward \Villiam "Rill" Garten............................................................. Guard \drian "Ade" Nelson.................... ................. .................. Forward

ALL NORTHWEST BASKETBALL TEAM Durno (Oregon) ................................. Forward............. . .....Rich <Whitman) Latham (Oregon) ...............................Center....................... Hunter ( Idaho) :\Ichor (W. S. C.) ···-······················· ......Guard

Page One Hundred and Twenty-three


C.\PT.\1:-.: liORT<>.'; :\kC.\LLIE '·llco.;t ~0 man in the coniercnce. He fights and wins. Olympic tryouts 1n0. Idaho will look iar and wide to replace ·~Jac· next vear.· ·

Pnge One lluntll·ed nnd Twenty-rou•·


"PAT" PERRI)'IE If event~ don't ovcrlnp, Pat will loom in the fini,h. Olymptc Team 1920.

"GUS" IR\'INC Record ~hot putter. ,\)ways a high point mnn. Olympic tryouts 1920.

Two

mile~

and he lnnd.-.

Our be't di,.

tance man.

"EDOIE" HUGHES Ca"e Idaho a ll)'ing 'tart in tbc two-mile relay, Seattle.

The half will alway' find "\'an·· well to the front.

PURDY EATOX The old 220 warhor,.-. day i• long.

"IL\Y" \\~t•"r<-

"lnd

11

('or""tcnt a' the

II \RS('] I

l{ay*' is with us as a •·rcgu·

Jar" this year. Did gn:al 'tuff in the two· mile relay, Seattle.

"Tl'RK" CERI.Ol'GIJ Idaho's oM warhor .. c.

IIi~ la~t

year. 1nd ht·'ll lx.· mi .... t."tl.

Page One I run<lt·ed nn(l Twenty-five


THE TRACK SEASON

1ft II I LE \JJ record

not a~ successful as la,.,t n:ar 1daho made a very etwiablc in track last season. Three of her men, Irvin~. Pernnc and ~1cCallie, were sent to the Olympic tryouts. Perrine and ln·i ng. picked by some as the best bets in America for the decathalon and pentathalon,' struck hard luck in the form of a climatic change and were so out of condition that they could not come up to their usual performances. Perrine was the only one to reach . \n twerp, but could not reco,·er his condition completely enough to hit h is old strid e. The Silver and Gold wa~ carri ed by \ 'an li ocson. ll a rsch. :\lcCallie, 1 fu ghes, Eaton and Gerlough at the Seattle Relay Carni,·al April 2~. The Teams entered two events a~ follows: 2-mile. l f ug-he;,, c;erlough, l farsch and \'an T[oesen: 1-milc. :\IcCallie. \ 'an ll uescn. Eaton . and Gerlough . finished second in the .2-milc and fourth in the 1-milc thus tying Ore~on for fourth place in the meet. The Cougar cinder kickers and field arti;,b won the dual meet from Idaho by six points on :\!cLean field :\Ia} R The conte;,t "a:> characterized by slow running and good work in the weight:-. The climax of the contest was reached when Tn·ing- of Idaho he a' ed the .;;hot ~.t feet, breaking his O\\'n record by one foot three inche,.,. The meet with :\fontana. one week later. was called off on account of rain.

NORTHWEST CONFERENCE MEET ( Pullman. June 3. 1920.) Cn i,·ers ity of Orc~on.................... O regon ,\ gricultural Col l e~c .... Cn i,·ersity of Idaho....................... C ni,·ersi ty of \\'ashington \\'ashington State College :\fontana State Cni,·ersity.. .. \\'hitman College

Page One Hundred nnd Twenty-l<ix

36 33 30 2-t 2.2 Hi ;l


' Mllt._;fltf<

t ·a).(l? On!' ll uncln•cl :cncl Twentr-s!'\·en


NORTHWEST CONFERENCE MEET Foster of Oregon was high individual, taking four firsts. Irving and Perrine came second and third rcspectiYely. In路ing heaved the weights for two firsts in the shot and jaYelin and Perrine rated second in both instances. Idaho obtained one more first when ~fcCallic won the quarter. Jenne of \V. S. C. set a new mark in the pole-,路ault for the Pacific Coas t when he cleared the bar at 13 feet 1 inch. S1..:~C\IARY

Event.

First.

Se cond.

Third.

JOO-yar d dash ........Foster (0) Eckman (W.) Snook (0. A. C.) 10:1 Pole vault... ........... Jenne (W. S. C.) Baker (W. S. C.) Goodner (W.) 13 ft. 1 in. Shot put................ rrving (l) Perrine (I.) l\1cGowen (l\1.) H ft. !>lh in. Mile run ................Swan (0. A. C.) Rachford (W. S. C.) Walkley (0.) 4 : :17 4-~ 440-yard dash ...... McCallie (1) Greene (0. A. C.) P1路att (W.) 50:2 120-yard hurdle .... Eildman (0. A. C.)Knutson (0.) Frankland (W.) 1.3:4 Discus throw ......Pope (W.) Bartlette (0.) :VIcGowen (M.) 136 ft. !) in. High jump ............Fr::tnkland (W.) Waite (0. A. C.) Jenne (W. S. C.) G ft. 1 in. 220-yard dash ......Foster (0.) Sterling (M.) Snook (0. A. C.) 21:4 880-yard run .......... Abbot (0.) Van Hoesen (1.) Douglas (W.) J: .>9 2-5 Broad jump..........Foster (0.) Perrine (I.) Dement (Whitman) 23 ft. 10 in. Javelin throw ..... .Irving (I.) Van Stone (O.A C.) Pope (W.) 170 ft. 2 in. 220-yard hurdles .. Sterling (M.) Eiklman (0. A. C.) Dement (Whitman)2G : 1 2-mile run ............ Smith (W. S. C.) Walkley (0.) Row lee (W. S. C.) 10:21 4-5

Relay-Oregon: F oster. Sunleaf. Hays lip, Abbot won; 0. A. C. second, I claho third, \Vas hing ton fourt h. Time, 3:29.

Page One Hundred and Twenty-eight


C\

PT~\ I\'

"GRO\"E" E\".\\'S. L. F.

"Cm ('r!' the outer garden with t,is feet hali the inning. and with the I all the other halL \\ c'll niiss 'Cnl\路e路 thi::. !'pring.

PaA"t> One Hunch路Nl nnd Twent)"-nine


"CJII( K" Captain·• runner.

l~et

T'' o

"U:S"

E\'.\:-1$-TillRD L~ading

hittrr

D.\SE

uul

J>as.,.

more years.

~toE

SHORTSTOP

One more yt.•ar to go. .\ strong Iutter, fa,t on the ha'~' and 3 S113J>Jl~ infielder.

"IH( II" FOX-C.\TUIER \ cool hc:L•I :uul 'tt.•al ba,e..,

t)n

3

powerful '' ing.

Can't

"l~ich"".

PERCY O'BRIEN-FIRST 11.\SE Two u'fit.·M.

C.\I{L C.\RLSOX

Pa~;"e

One Hundred and Thil ty

1'11TII ER

mHr~ )·c:an~

to go.

\\~ork,

well in the


"J L\L\IIE"

FOX-C~NTER

FIELD

A consistent fielder and a good man with

the stick.

One more year.

"BUNT" TIRES II£ .\ RS

PITCII ER

One of the old guard on the nine. Uclped wallop \\". S. C. the li•·st time in thirteen years.

"ED" FOR.\1'\

PtTCII ER

Pitched at Washington before joining the Army. L.ots of smoke.

"OZ"

TIIO~lPSON-RIGl!T

One of Hutch's finds. Two years to go.

FiELD

Darned good hitter.

LEO SCHROEDER- PITCIIER "KEN" Jlt:~TER- PITCI!~R The two "dark horses" of the Whitman classic.

Page One Hundred and Thirty-one


BASEBALL SEASON \\"ith a handicap oi bad weather Idaho :-tarted the "ea::;on with \'Cry little practice late in the spring of 1920 and di,·ided honor::; with the Cougars in t '' o games played April 23-2-J.. On .\pril 28 29 Oregon's webfooted twirlers came into the home camp and graubed two games. The journey to \\'hitman resulted in a win and a forfeiture. The Silver and Gold then journeyed to ~lantana and in a three-game classic annexed one.

"til \IH.TE" r.R \Y . .?b

Fourth year <>f ba•eball. One of the lu•ling hill<"· \

lu.·A1ly ba ... c·runner.

Idaho played four games on the home field during the week ending ~fay 22 and the score book read: Idaho 8. \\'hitman -t; Idaho 3, "'hitman 5: Idaho 7. ~fontana 10; Idaho 3. :\fontana 5.

In the final t\\'o-game classic of the ::;cason Idaho dropped the introductory game to the Cougars and annexed the second by a ..J.-1 score. Eddie Foran pitched some of the be:;t ball ::;een in :\loscow for five years. This season's material looks as if it could play real baseball and practice is progressing in spite of cold weather. Coach :\Tc~fillan knows baseball and will turn out a Sih cr aiHl Gold team that will bid "trong for a leading place in the Conference.

Page One Hun<lrc<l ancl ThirtY· two


FRESHMAN A THLETfCS -Q'RESH~IEN ATHLETICS this year took on a more decided ~ form than heretofore has been shown in the different sports. The opening season brought forth an increased amount of activity among the men for the positions on the "Frosh" foot.ball team. \Vhile the season "·as rather unsuccessful, clue to the numerous injuries received by some of the best men. the team came off with an even break 111 its outside games, ha ,·ing won th ree and lost three.

Basketball material loomed big, and during the season se,·en games were played. of wh ich four were won, and three lost only by narrow margins. The defeats were due more to a "jinx" w hich hovered over the "Idaho Kittens··, and seemed only to appear in the last minutes of play, than to the superior playing of their opponents. In the line of track and baseball little acti,•ity was shown this year. The only practice the baseball men received was skirmish w ith the Varsity players. No outs:de games were played and the baseball season ended shortly after it started. Track was also of s hort duration as no matches could be held for the "Frosh" contestants. In the major sports of track and baseball the next year looms up as a p romts mg star. l\Ieets w ill be staged for the .. F rosh" track team and games w it h outside schools will be on schedule for the embryo Varsity baseball aspirants. Next year ·~ Varsity football and basketball will be greatly aided by the men who have so s uccessfully competed this year for "Frosh" honors. From the Freshmen class new material is looked for and if trad itions hold true the old letter men will find competition high for their respective positions.

Page One Hundred and Thirty-three


Brown

Kinneson

:\[usser

::ihe rman

P eterson

WRESTLING This is the second year for wrestling at Idaho and although only t\\路o matches were held and one of them taken the spor t has been thoroughly established. l)ncler the leadership of "Babe'' Brown the Idaho team took the match with \\'ash in gton State College 8-4 in the enemy's camp. Idaho \\'On one c,路ent and two decisions and the forfe iture of the heavyweight bout. The second eyent w hich was staged at Idaho was taken by \V. S. C., 13-2

THE T EAM 125-pound............. ............................................."Pete Peterson 135-pouncl................................................. .......... \\'. Phillippi 145-pound .................................................................................:.I usser 158-pound .................................................:.........................Kinneson 175-pouncl............................................... ........ F . Horning 175-pound ..............................................................................B rown

Page One Hundred and Thirty-four


TENNIS Tennis took a big- ~tep upward at Idaho last year. The courts were imprO\'t'd, giving- a great deal more playing- .;pace. This encouraged more to go in ior the g-amt·. From tho..;c win turned out an elimination tournament picked the three \\ ho we'rl' to represent 1daho in the Conference Tournamt•nt which was held he~·c. Idaho was handicapped lir:-t h) the lack of tenni:. ulllrt~. and second by the weather, which permitted ht1t a fe\\ weeks of playing \\·eather before the tournament.

\\'. S. C. and \\'hitman \\'ere thl' onl) conference teams to appear at the meet. In the drawing- for opponents Idaho drc\\' \\'. S. C. in the singles and \Yhitman for first match in cloubll'"· \\. S. C. clra\\'ing bye. In the singles K Tlunter of Idaho was defeated, o--1-, 62, and \\'yman oi Idaho wa..; defeatt:cl. +o. ri--1-. (i 2. while K. Hunter of Idaho was ddeated, 6-2, 7-5. \Yhitman then played \\'. S. C. and won two out of three matches. The next morning doubll'S were played off. \\ hitman drew Idaho. The winner of the match was to play \\'. S. C. for the championship. Gan·er and \\'ebster of \\'hitman <Ideated \\'yman and K. Hunter of Idaho in three hard-fought sets. o--1-. +6. 7 5. In the play-off \\' . S. C. defeated \Vhitman in fi,·e set:-:. thus winning the tournament.

WOMEN'S ATHLETICS In basket ball, baseball. hockey and tennis the women of Idaho ha,·e shO\\ n the greatest enthusiasm during the past season. A large per cent of the girls enrolled in the C'ni,·er~ity ammered the call issued to those interested in the various sports . •\n inter-class basketball tournament was held in February, from which the Freshmen emerged victorious .

.

A tennis tournament will be an e\·ent of the late spring and the winners will represent Idaho in games with \\'hitman in \Valla \Valla in ).fay. About fifty girls ha,·e voiced their intention to make every effort to play in this final tournament. The cold, damp weather of last spring proved di:-couraging to tennis enthusiasts, but the sunny 1Iarch and April days of this year have already seen many in tennis togs and the material is very promi::-ing.

The girls of the University of Idaho aspire to do all in their power to boost. uphold and represent nobly their Alma l\Iater.

Page One Hundred and Thirty-th·e


Interscholastic Basketball Tournament Tht• 'ictorious teams of the eight inter :-.;ectional tournament:-. battled inr ba,ketball supremacy ".\larch 17 and 18 in the l·ni,·ersity gymna..,ium. Driggs came back this year and took the cluunpiothhip cup in a exhibition of team work and basket shooting ability from the Capital boys to the tune of 3-l-1-l. Elimination games \\ere run oA· on the 17. Contrary to all dope noise defeated Coeur d',\ lcnc and Drigg:- made the south sure of the tournament by walking 0\·er Lewiston. t

las~ical

For high class basket ball and dope-spilling the l<J2l tJ.lurnament far surpa,;scd any that had gone before.

ALL-ST ATE TEAM La nsdon ( lloise) ......... . Ifill (Driggs) ....................... . Dunaway (Lewiston 1 ...... Talbot (Coeu r d'.\lene) l.riggs (Driggs) ............ ·····- ··-

Page One Hundred and Thirty-six

Fon\arcl Forward Ct•tttt•r l.uarcl Guard


-

Page One Hundred and Thlrty-se\'en


PROF. CHE:\OWI-:TII

DEBATE The fortune::. oi debate ha,·e fared )e-.:- fa, orahl) at the L"ni,·er:>ity thi:- ) car than formerly. The explanation for thi~ i~ not to be found in a lack of ability on the part of the men who ha,·e represented Idaho. On the contrary, this year has brought out new material ~cconcl to none. The ·· L" men. it is true, ha,·e disdained the field wherein their former laurels were won, and have thus thrust the fortunes of the Uni\'ersity into untried hands. But considering the valor of the new recruits it is open to question whether any strengt h has been sacrificed by the absence of the seasoned veterans. Our defeats ha,·e been due not to our weakness, but to the strength of the opposition. The competition has been keen, the kind that gives debating its yaJue. The International Debate was particularly useful in exhibiting our weakness and whetting our de~ires for future Yictories. The wide~pread interest in debate among the student:-, the practice which the debaters w ill get in the intramural impromptu contests to be inaugurated next year, and the aclclitional weight which ~Ir. CoJlins brings to the Coaching Staff indicate that the history of debate next year wilJ be written in a more triumphant strain.

Page One l fund red and Thirty-eight


\\"ILLL\\1 u ..-\

~.

HIH~l'OE.

:\Ianager

rare combination of managcr-i31 ami tie路

bating ability!'

II', ,\, C.

V~b<JIC

".\ debater \\ ith all th" ci<><(Uence of her

sex."

L.\\\"RE:s'C~:

.\. \\',\LL.\CE

" ..\ calm mimi think' ...traighte~t."'

WALSER S

GREATHOUSE

W. S. C.

Debolt~

I utrrttaNorwf Dt>bate " H e'd

rath~r r~a<l

Ia" re(>nrh than

~at."

Page One Hundred and Thirty-nine


EDW.\RD II. LlTOOY W. S. C. Debate ".\ Freshman with a bright future."

GLEN~

R.

\\"ILKISO~

W. S. C. Debate l ••

\nother Freslunan of gre:lt promise."

:\liCJTAEL THOMETZ l111ero~atio11al

Debate

".\ speaker of excellent poise and ability."

~.EWIS

A:\IBREY THOU.\S

l111er11atiaual Debate W. S. C. Debate "Red would take the OPW'Site of any ·ques· tion."

Page One Hundred and Forty


Page One Hundred and Forty-one


October 9. 1920.

1'.\TRO:\S .\XD P.\TRO:\ ESS l ~S: ~Iiss Butler :.Ir. Kirkham :.Irs. Dickinson Dr. \Yodsedalek :.r rs. \ \' odsedalek

Page One H undred and Fo,路ty-two


HLET~.­

HAL

:c·, .

October IS. 1920.

P.\TROXS \:\D I' \TROX ESSES: Coach and :\frs. Kelley Dean and .:\Ir:->. Cockerill Dean and :\ln.. F .. \. Thomp~un Dean 1\utler .:\Ir. Kirkham

l'a'-'e One llundl'('(l ancl Fo•·ty-th•·ee


JUNIOR

PROM January I S. JCJ2 J. I ' \TRO .\/ S . \:\1>

1 ). \TR O :\I ~S SE S :

l'rcs. and ~lrs .. \ . I I. Cp ham Dean and ~~ rs. E. ~I. ll ulme ~] r. ancl ~f rs. L. F. !'arsons Dean and :\f r,.., J. ( ~. Eldridg-e Dean EYelyn Hutlt:r Dean and :\Ir-;, 0. J>. Cockerill

P age On e H un dr ed ancl

~路m路ty- rou r


MILITARY BALL. February 19, 1921

P.-\TRO:--JS .-\);D Pr\TRO);ESSES Col. and :\Irs. E. R. Chrisman Pres. and :\J rs. A. H. tJpham :\laj. and :\[rs. R. C. Harrison Judgc and :\Irs. Forney Judge and :\frs. Truitt

l':t).(e One lluntl,.e<l ana Fot路ty-tlve


.\pril Hi. 11J21

P.\TRO :\'S .\:\ D P.\TRO:\ E~~E~ :\fr. and ':\Irs . L. F. Par so n~ :\fr. and Mrs . Kenneth Collins Dean Evelyn Butler Dr. R . ..-\. ~Iuttko\\'s ki

Pagt>

On~>

lltll"ll'l·cl ancl l·'ol'!Y·"ix


May 14. 1921

PR:te One Hundred nnd Forty-se\'en


Other College Dances The Upperclassmen's Dance Bury-the-! I a tchet Dance The Co-ed Prom The Economics Club Dance Th e DeSme t Club Dance The University J azz Band Dance The .\ g. Bawl The V ictory Dance The Bench and Bar Dance Left-over Dance The "l" Club Dance The "~Tucker~" Ball The Foresters' Dance The Engineers路 Dance The .\ . E. F. Club Dance President' s In augural Ball Pre- ~led. Ball <;tee Club Dance -

Page One Hundred and Forty-eight

-

September 25, 1920 -

October 1, October 2, October 23, October 29, October 30, ~ovembe r 11, :\ovember 13, December 17, January 8, January 29, 1Iarch 5. - :\farch 12, March 18, ~farch 29. - :\fay 7. .\ pril 30.

1920 I920 1920 1920 1920 1920 1920 1720 1921 1921 1921 192 1 1921 1921 1921 192 1


Pa.;e One l-lUt\(lre<l and Forty-nine


M USIC DEPARTMENT Since ib in-..tallation the :\[u!'ic Department of the l"ni\ er;.ity has played an increasingly imp·ortant part in the · affairs of the Student Body.

It has grown in str ength and popularity until it is now the in-

terest of the largest part of the students. This year its faculty has been increased and its interc:-ts and acti\·itie:-- ha\·e been greatly expanded. The growth of the Department in the last three year;. ha,. been grealy due to the leadership of Profe:--sor Edwin Orlo Bangs. \\'c may safely sa) that by his effort:- he ha:-- produced the best trained :\len's (;lee Club which the Cni\·ersity has C\'Cr had. :\Ir. Dickinson. the \'iolinist. has not only been a remarkably good instructor but has played his way into the hearts of all who IHI\'C heard him . .\t the beginning of the year. the piano department was led by ~liss

\\' cgmann and :\lr:;. ~harp. .\t the clo:--e of the first semester we suffered the lo-.:- oi :\[iss \\' egmann. who \\·a:- called home. but the

yacann· ha-. been \\ell filled by :\I i~s Clark oi the Boston oi

~Iusic.

Page One Hundred and

\,'Itt~·

Con~en atory


Hang~

I >ickiiNlll

Scott

The Glee Club The part.' oi twcnty-iour that toured the :-tate irom Fl'l>ruary ninth to t\\Cilty-eighth made the greatest hit with it~ audiences tl;at any Idaho (;Icc Club has yet been accorded. The club was warmly rccei,路ed at each of the fifteen Idaho cities in which it appeared. For the first time in the history of the club a Yisit was made to our neighbor :<tate at its l~niYersity in Missoula. The financial ~uccess of the tour was remarkable. In ~pitc of pre,路ailing high prices and the large number in the part.'. the st'ason is considered to haye been a slight gain for the trea~ury. The itincrar~ of the tour was: Coeur <L\Ienc. Kellogg. \\' allace. i:-soula. ~fontana: Idaho Falls. Blackfoot. Pocatello. T" in Falls. Burley. Rupert. Cooding. Boise. Xampa. Caldwell. Payette and ~Toscow.

~I

Page One Hundred nnd :J:o,lfty-one


Page One Jl unch '(Hl ancl

J;'lft~路-two


Page One Hundred anll Fifty-three


%

:.:.:

•f.

...

:::

"c

~

-:::;

:<:

"

:;; ~

'-'

J

;:

~~

' g -.

l'a,.:e One Hunch·ed nnd l'ifty-four


Twelfth Night l'r~sl·ntcd

hy th~ ~cnior Class. Commenc~mcnt \\ ~ck. Jllnc 10. 11J20 \. \\'. John:;on

( lr:-.ino

I I . \ \'.

~ehastian

.\ n ton io .\

~ca

Captain

~tap l c~

. \. It T hompson

1:c lix Pla:;tino

-

\\' . 1\. ;-Jewland

\ aknt inc

\. l' ittm an •\t woocl 1 ~. \\' . Poe

t ·llrio ~ir

Toh.' llekh \ndrc\\ \g-llecheck \laholio Fabian -

~ir

L. J. Yost E. K. Lindley

Festc <Hi,ia -

J. H. Jnncs \(arion B) rns

Ra) .\gee

\tar) \lcKcnna

\ iola \!aria l'ricst. Officers. Sen·ants. Etc.

\ ' crl Oli' cr

-

Other 111l'lllht•rs nf the Class

I'age One Hun dred and F ifty-five


"Clarence" (i/i;;i 0 far dramatic \\·ork has been done under the direction

~

of tlH' Engli:d1 Club. although some attempt-- ha,·e been made to or

ganize a company of Cni,·ersity Players a" a separate and distinct group. Dramatic work not only develops the talent of the participant but brings some oi the best modern drama to the students. ln years past more work has been done in this line. but the quality has never been better. llooth Tarkington's famous play "Clarence'' is the only one thus f;tr presented this ~car. On ~larch 30. the night oi President C pham's Inauguration. thi:-. production was playeel to a ··capacity house". The play \\·as also taken to Le"·iston. Coeur <1'.\lenc and other northern town:-.. TilE

J>EOPLI~

~Irs. ~lartin

~fr.

\\'hcckr \\hcdcr Bohh) Cora ~[iss \ iokt l'innc,· Clarence Della Dinwicldil· ~I r. llubcrt ~tem ~lr".

OF

Till~

PL.\Y llcthel Collins Cameron King Pearl Stalker Joe ~Ioore Fleeta Brennan Joan ~IcCallum ~I ichael Thometz ~fargaret :\Iimms r,con \\. oodrow Doy ~IcKinley

The plays arc under the capable mana.~cmcnt oi :\Ir. John Cushman of the Engli"h Department and much talent ha..; been discO\·crcd bT him in the short time that he has been here.

Page One Hundred anti Flfty-81'


Page One ll nndred and Fifty-seven


The Hills at Lewiston (>nee more I see these well-remembered hi! b. To them the years have brought no trace of c hange. T hey rise abO\·e the winding river's rilb .\nd roll away in hazy ra nge on range. ln shade and light and many blending hues.:\ow brown that fades to faw n. then fires to pink. From pink to Yiolet. lucid green a nd blues That in the haze no\\· s"·im. no\\' melting sink. Forget these hilb?

r

From .. Pro:-pect I :lull"' one da,·

Sa\\' sunset: belO\\' me tinged \\ ith ro:-c

The glowing ri,·er like a bright sa ... h lay; Distinct against the western -;ky aro ...c Dark bluffs made double in the ri' er's breast: .\nd from the hills the swallcm.., S\\ iftl~ made Their home\\'ard way toward rugged "Swallo\\' ... · :\ e,l·· .\nd sought with whir and whirl its :-hcltering shade. Then all the hills were softly ,·eiled in haze Through which the opal lights of ... un set pl a.n·d Till fad ed fro m the sky the sun's last rays :\ nd darkness gently cr ept o'e r hill and glade. l'll not fo rget the hi lls, for I have seen . . \nd in my heart have felt the witchery well: The c hanging light. the soft enshrouding- sheen That le nd s to t he se ro ugh hill s my sterious spell.

Page One Hundr·c<l an<l Fifty-eight


Father Takes a New Partner Something had happened to disturb the peaceful monotony of the Lewis' family life. It had happened since Zelia had returned from college to endure the three summer months of \'acation in II arlowton. Father felt less sure of himself, and mother. wlh> al\\'ays had prided herself on the generous slices of homemade bread and the large chunk of freshly churned butter on her table each meal. was beginning to wonder if the butter should be cut into tiny squares and the bread sliced into thin narrow pieces. For Zelia .had only been home a few hours when she had made this first correction. and had also suggested that Chuck. the ten-year-old brother. be compellccl to wash his face not only around his mouth. hut at least as far back as his t•ars. llut things began to look serious when Zelia announced at the dinncr table that she had an ambition. :\fother said nothing. Father on!~ grunted and went on eating. while Chuck eagerly asked if she had bought it at the auction held that afternoon in front of the post-office. Ze II a fa ilccl to hear her sma II brother· s question. hut con ti nuccl to l':O.: plain her plans to the family. _\n ambition is seldom an~ thing lll cause alarm in a well regulated household. unless it is unusual. hut thi~ was different. Zelia explained that while in college she had been conYerted into a new belief. ";\ew Thought". as it was called. .\s a result of her study on the subject. she belie"ed that this was her seconcl time on earth and in her preYious life she had been an author of much skill and it was her duty to continue on her career. llut Zelia had been handicapped in this. her re-birth. because she had been placed in the wrong en\'ironment. It was impossible for her to write, here. ia her home. so she desired to rent a studio. Of course, she would run home now and then to see mother and replenish her refrigerator. For a few minutes bvth parents ,,·ere too surprised to answer. Father was the first to recm·er. There followed a \'ery stormy scene, in which :\lr. Lewis was the chief actor and Zelia the chief martyr . .\fter much had been said. :\lr. Lewis ga,·e final instructions to the effect that no money would be forthcoming for such nonsense. If she were a boy it would be bad enough, but ior a girl to e\·en plan on such a thing made it seem more ridiculous. At this point. Zelia came forward with her most coll\·incing argument and the one in which she delighted most. \\"hy was it wrong for her to liYe in a studio. ii it was not wrong for a boy? \\'as she

l'alo('e One II "n1h'<•1l an <I Fifty-nine


not of a new era where the standards were the same for men and women? \ \'hy was it wrong? :\[ r. Lewis stopped, not only because his knowledge of this new era was limited, but because he knew that it was wrong but he could not explain why he felt so. His strongest argument seemed to be in regard to the money part, and this he repeated most emphatically, then left before there was chance for further argument. Zelia knew she could neither rent a studio or live 111 one without money. If her father would not gi,·e it to her she would have to work and that would interfere with her new religion. So she spent the next few days in a distracted ao<) tolerant manner toward her mother and a sort of mental aloofness to·ward her father and small brother. The one thing that \\'as sure to bring her mind back to the family group was Chuck's use of the English language. I Je had not, as yet. learned \\'hcthcr "These things is" or "These things arc", and if gi\'cn a choice he would be sure to say "I seen". only to be immediately corrected hy his sister. It ne,·er seemed to make any difference \\'here Chuck was or how often he said it. Zelia was sure to hear and just as sure to correct him. Then as Chuck found it wiser to lean~ the house than to stay and argue. he would emit a disgusted "Oh (;ee" and dash out to entertain his playmates with a circus performance in which he played the part of "Hattie the Haughty". :\Irs. Lewis was silent about her daughter's ":\ ew Thought" religion and her efforts to impro,·e Chuck's grammar. There was something that to Zelia's mother seemed far more serious and required more immediate action. For :\Irs. Lewis still remembered the stormy scenes she had had with her thirteen-year-old daughter about the length of her skirts. Zelia had stubbornly insisted that she was t')O large to wear short dresses. and now, at nineteen she was wearing- her skirts where she should have wom them at thirteen. This was not all Zelia had learned in regard to her dress, for each day ~Irs. Lewis disc.lvercd some useless manner of \\'Caring a useful article. \\'hen it seemed that something must be done to restore the family peace something did happen . but how and by whose hand was a mystery as deep as that of the Ouija Board. It was the morning after the lawn party at :\Irs. Graham's. where 1larlowton's select young people had been im·ited to meet Harry Bennitt a distant relati,·e of the ho::tess. Zelia had made an impression on the young guest and as he was going to remain at the Graham home during the summer months she desired to make more of an impression. lh1t the next morning she receiYed the typewritten letter that caused her so much

. Pa...:e One llt' tHll'ecl nntl Sl>.ty


worr~

the week!-> following-. . \iter :;he had read it !->he did an unu!'>ual in handing- it to her mother. By the expression in her daug-h ter'!'> C) e;-; and the two brig-ht spots on her checks. :\Irs. I.e\\ i-. knew that she must not take time to hunt her g-lasses. hut immt•diatcJ_, he ga n to read : thin~.

.. :\I y <kar :\I iss Lewis: You could ha\'e looked so nice. at the party last night. ii yuur dress had not been so ,-cry low in the neck and so cxlremt:ly short. \\"hy dress like a child when you no long-er ha,·c tht• form of one? assure you the ctrcct lea,·es much to be desired. --~incerely.

.. \ Friend." \\'hat :\Irs. Lewis would ha,·e said ii ~wen a chanct•. is difficult to -.ay, for she \\as not g-i,·cn an opportunity to cn.•n express surpn..;t•. Zelia hardly \\ aitcd for her mother to finish reading the letter bdore -.ht• hlazcd forth with the assertion that it was only "hat one should e"pect from li\ ing in :-uch a place. '"here your busim·-.s "a-. e' crybody's business. ".\nd." she added. a:; she left the room. "since iather is so anxious t•• protct·t me irnm g-os:-ip. I will expect him to ha\'c thi-. slopped at ••nce." :\I r. Le" is be<: a me 'ery ang-ry that e,·cning- after he had n:ad the lettt•r. and 'o\\ ed se\ era) different Yarieties of 'eng-cance on the one responsible for this insult. not only to his daug-hter. but to the family. I:ut. during the week. three other letters had been recei\ t'<l. t•ach more personal than the last. and }.Ir. Lewis had not so mud1 as a clue. Zelia was worried. as e\·ery one could see. and looked as if she cared \'t'ry little w heth er she had been born once or twice. l ~arly ~aturday morni n g Zelia chance to be in the gardcn when she was surprised by a cheerful " Good ).forning-" from someone on the other side of the hedge. Looking up. she saw llaH) 1\cnnitt look ing 0\ er the top of the hedge. Zelia returned his g-rct·t ing and then like all girls. modern or otherwise. began to apolog-ize because she had on an apron and was not "dressed for callers".

"llut I think ) <HI look ,-ery nice in your apron. and it \\ould hardl~ ht· appropriate to \\ear anything else this early in the morning. would it;-·· ··_lust like a man."' thought Zelia. "women must \\car aprons 111 the morning. hut it is not necessary that men alway:- "car "' t•ralls tn the

t'aJo:t' Ont· lt tuHit·•·•l nctd Sixty-one


nHlrnlngs. I l,lwe,·er. ior some reason she did not express this thought out loud. They talked ior a short while and as :\1 r. llennitt lcit Zelia in,·i ted him to dinner ior the following day. The following day was Sunday and with it came another letter. \\hen it was deli,·ered. Zelia quickly separated it irom the family mail and went to her room. She did not open it at once. hut sat looking at it. trying to decide whether to destroy the letter "ithout reading it, or read it and then destroy it. Curiosity conq uered. IH l\\'l'\'er. and she read: "?\ly dear :.1 iss Zelia: You looked ,·cry nice in your apr,ln Saturday morning. It was a little longer than your dresses. and its simplicity made you look girlish. I helie"e that you are imprO\·ing.

So the ,·illain had been iound. \\.ho but llarr) Bennitt had seen her in her apron? I I is impudence hurt her for a moment. but his interest abo pleased her. \\'ell. she ,,.<mid show him. She would he nice to him and then when he really liked her and was ..,orry. she would ireeze him with a pre)ared lecture on "The :\c,, \\'oman" and her re-birth. Zelia said nothing to her parents about her l<bt letter or her discm e1). ln the next few weeks she was with !larry Bennitt all of her evenings and nearly all oi her afternoons. .\nd Zelia had changed. She said nothing about ":\ew Thought" and had even d\'erlooked sc'cral of Chuck's errors. \\'hen the time was ready for her rc,·cnge on llarry. Zelia d id not care to do it. and after postponing it se,·eral times she at last told him the story. lt did not take I larry long to con\'ince her he was not the unknown friend. because. as Zelia later said. "she had never really thought he was". One afternoon. not bng afterwards. Chuck managed to find eJwug-h courage to go to his father's office. on business. The parti<:ular busi ness on hand was to com·ince his father that his bicycle needed two ne\\ tires. . \fter listening to his son's request }.lr. l.c\\'is dismissed him with the unsatisfactory ans,,·er oi. "\\'e will sec ah<lUt it. later." Chm·k \\'as disappointed. I lo"· "·as he going- to explain that he muo;t ha' e tho:-;e tires right away. \\'hile trying to think of some other \\'ay of pn·-.enting his case. Chuck stoj)ped at the t) pewriter de-.k. and began to turn the pile oi loose papers. Suddenly. he chanced t 1 read the heading of an unfinished letter. still in the type\\ ritcr. .. }.ly dear

• Pa!'e One ll ur11hecl nnd

;<Jxt~·-lwo


l\liss Lewis," it began, " you looked- -." more, similar to the one in the typewriter.

On the desk were two

··Gee, Dad! I fou nd something ." l\Ir. Lewis turned to where his son was standing, with one of the unfinished letters in his hand. "Dad , these letters is- -·· began Chuck. "These letters arc, my son," sharply corrected ).lr. Lewis. "Chuck. you may see about your tires immed iately, and-remember that business partners never reveal secrets. Are we going to be partners?'' Chuck looked at his father, solemnly for a few seconds- then he grinnned, ·' Gee, yes." -AG~ES

SWEENEY, '22.

Page On e Hunclt·ed and Sixty-three


The Seasons Spring~un~hinc

Picnic:; Rain Phi Delts Soaking- wet ,\gain Summer \\"ork sa,路e Your

ca~h

To keep your rep From going ~ma~h

. \utumn ~chool

\\'ork ~ome

more

K ceping11 urry-ups

From the Door \\.intet lee :\asty

~pilJ

Co-ed Coa:--ting Down the I I iII.

Page One Hundred :uHI Hlxty-fn111路


jerry ··~rule

nature and human nature's just. abuut the same," remarked ,\rthur .\insworthy one stormy April afternoon, as he came out of a bro\\ n study. "I low . •\rt?" asked "Pop" I [enderson. the hunk-house because of the weather.

The men were lounging

111

"\\'hich of us are mules .. \rt ?" jibed young llaywood. "\\' ell," beg-an Ainsworthy. ··you feJlows know how mule~ act. There arc a ,·cry few mules that are good all the time; most mules arc fairly good most of the time; t,¥en there's a bunch that's never good. You can di,·ide men the same way: saints, the ayerage man, and jail birds. ":-\ow. l'ye got a jailbird of a mule. only he roams the grassy meadows. for he is too mean to work. I used to think I'd seJI him. but I didn't like to sting somebody else. Then an incident happened which made me want to keep him. although I ha,en't \\'Orked him for almost a ) car. I Ie is hard to catch and harder to work. \\' hene,·er l \\anted to "catch up" the beast I'd ha,·e to make a half holiday for the boys. (;enerally one of us on a pony would run Jerry into the barn. Jerry is the mule in question. He is that pretty ;\faltese-colored mule. Generally a barricade was built across the part of the barn where Jerry and the pony were. :-\ext. we on the ground got out of the way so if 1\lr. l\fule ripped things up we would stilJ he whole. One day the fellow riding the horse got his leg broke by Jerry kicking him. 1\fte r that the man on the horse kept the kg toward Jerry thrown across the pommel of the saddle.'' ''\\' hy didn't ya rope him?" queried llaywood . .. \\'e'JJ let you hang on to the rope the next time we rope him." ":-\o. thanks ... came the reply . .\rthur paused a moment and then began again. ·'The summer T had my deep well dug there was a high school lad working for me. llc boasted so about his dri,·ing that I gaye him my outlaw to work. ,\ \\eek later T discm·ered the boy going into Jerry's stall through the hay mo". 1 can't say I blamed him much. "That C\'Cning 1 asked him how he liked to work Jerry. He didn't like to talk about it. but said that Jerry was all right i£ the team wasn't

l'a~e

One Hundr·ed and Sixty-five


going up hill. This was news to me. but the lad's :-tatement was prm·ed true during the follo,,·ing harvest.

"I hadn't intended to work my hard-boiled property. hut l needed some extra stock, so I stuck him in on the combine. The next afternoon we came to that steep pitch at the head of the big draw in the big wheat field. You know my land corners there with part of the draw head off my property. Tfs a bad turn for a machine and once you start you don't dare stop ... . \ gain A in sworthy paused and gazed around the group o n the bunks. The bunk-house was better than most. It had enough windows to in sure good ventilation: it was neatly white-wa!;hed inside and out; there were three sets of double-decked bunks with plenty of room between for clothes room. se,·eral comfortable chairs stood around, but none were occupied. for the men lay on their bunks listening to the rancher's story. "The incident which made me decide to keep my jailbird happened that same summer I dug the deep well. Cp to that time I bought my water from ~ullivan the same as the rest of the farmers around here." "\\"ho is Sulli,·an ?" inquired the Professor. "lie's the man who owns the warehouse, the store. the only home and the water supply at Fairlands," volunteered young I lenderson. "You sec." he went on . "it costs too much to dig a \\ell in this neck of the timberless woods so the water is shipped in from down near \\'allula. The water train comes up twice a week with the stuff they[ mean ~ullivan-sells for t\\·o dollars a thousand gallons. .\rt's well, here. cost about ten thousand dollars. for we are forty fi,·e miles from \\'alia \\'alia and the well had to be bored through rock. :\l ost men can't stand the ten thousand dollars. r didn't mean to interrupt your story, Art.'' ".\s I sa id." went o n the Doss. "I got my water from Sulli,·an and thereon hangs my story. However. I'm getting ahead of myself. so I'll back step to "·here I learned that Jerry wouldn't pull up hill. "This particular day Jerry seemed inclined to balk. The combine dri,·er rigged a chain around his neck and fastened it to the hitch of the team in front of him. \\"ith the chain on him he would either ha,·e to go or get choked. The scheme worked all right until the machine came to the head of the draw I mentioned. I Jere was the bad corner I told you about. Jerry wouldn't pull and was literally dragged up hill ior a hundred yards. The driver didn"t dare stop till the machine was around the corner and up the hill. The mule was not only nearly choked to death. but the hide was ripped all the way around his neck

Pstf.(C One llunth·ed and Sixty-six


by the chain.

Of course, we had to take him out and dope his cuts. For a whole week Jerry "·as as gentle as a pus~y. I turned him out in the pasture at the end of a week. for I didn't want to he bothered with him at the stable. ··The day after I turned him loose l mo\'ed the outfit to the upper place and left my wife and tweiYe-year-old Jean here. \\' ell, for some reason Jerry didn't come down to water for almost two days. \\"hen he finally did come there was no one to open the gate for him. I I e must have been pretty stiff yet or he would ha,·e broken clown the fence. Jean saw him wait ing by the gate and, girl-fashion, felt sorry for him. Ordinarily she wouldn't ha,·e gone near the mule, fo r 1 had thrown a pretty heayy scare into her, but her pity got the best of her fear. She let him in and he seemed to appreciate it. I I c looked at her for a while, then took a big drink, rolled, drank again, and trotted off through the gate . .. The next week was the hottest I've eyer seen it and to cap it the Sunday water train struck a cow and clumped our water off the track. \\'e didn't get water for four days because of that cow. The cistern at the station ran dry ~Ionday. \\'e had to stop working. of course, and to sa\'e feed l turned the stock. about forty-fiye head. into the pasture . .. Thursday morning the water came in but the stock didn't come down to the barns till the middle of the afternoon. ~ o one happened to be near the barns. a~ the day was so hot. 11eat wa,·cs danced from cYerything. The wa ,·es distorted things so that it made the buildings look like they were trying to ·shimmy·. The flies were black on eYery living object and bit worse than mosquitoes. :\ny mo,·ement along the road stirred up a cloud of stifling alkali dust which added nothing to the comfort of the day. These conditions made the men irritable and cross, so that they thought of noth ing but personal comfort. \\'hen the stock came down the men just didn't pay any attention to them. Jean, howe,·er. tried to let the mules in. bnt something was out of keller with the gate. Seeing some one at the gate made the animals over anxious and impatient. "\fter working some time, Jean was startled to hear a chang! and see a mule go through the fence. Others iollowed, causing a stampede. She cowered back in the corner near the trough. The animals became frantic in their efforts to get to the water. In their ~truggles they knocked oYer the trough. Then they began to fight. .\s the fence which enclosed the corral was hog-tight and high. Jean had to stay where she was. The fight became a battle. J can fell. It looked like she would be trampled under the hoofs of the ~truggling animals. l started for the scene as soon as I could, but

Page One Hundred nnd Sixty-seven


what wa:- I to do? Ju:-.t as it seemed \\orst ior the little girl a new note was sounded. I saw Jerry fighting as if he had gone mad. ll c was standing hct"路cen the fence and the herd fighting like a blue de,路il. :\[y heart sank as 1 saw the fight so ncar that little girl ni mine. But as I got nearer I saw that Jer ry was fight ing for her. Ears up, teeth gleaming. heeb lashing. eyes flashing. screeching. squealing. and biting. he was slowly forcing that mob of mules a\\ay irom Jean. J:ack the herd surged inch by inch toward what Jerr~ was fighting to sa\T. l ie rall ied and held for an instant within a few kct of Jean. ln that instant I got Jean onn the iencc. 路路Jerry. like mo:-.t criminals. has his gcH)d spot:-. -KE:\\"ETII II. lll':\TI'R.

Page One Hundred ancl

Hl,ty-ei~ht


If You and I ] f you and l would smile a little more. And 1 wou ld kinder be: If you would stop to think before Y o u speak of fau lts you see : lf I would show more patience. too, \Yith all with whom I'm hurled. Then I would help-and so wou ld you. T o make a better world. But just as long as you keep still And plod your selfish way; And I rush on, and heedless kill The kind words I could say\\' hile you and I r efuse to sm ile And keep our gay flags furled . Someone will grumble all the while That it's a gloomy world. -J/. Dubois. '2-t. llllllllllllllllflrtllllllllll!lrttllltl

The Late Guest E,·erything was in readiness: there "·as to be no boisterous ce lclnation, no stimu lation other than the materialization of the plot. She had been thinking about it for se,·eral days and now her desires we re to be fulfi lled. The rooms were hung with hol iday decorations. In the dining room CO\·ers were laid for six. suggesti,·e of a supper to usher in the new year. The hostess surveyed the completion of her well-laid plans with a fee ling of satisfaction. Once assembled . ther e woul d be no opport unity of escape. llraYely she fough t dmnt her emotions while awaiting the arri,·a l of her guests. A shadow fl itted by the window and a light step was heard. From the rear of the ho use a faint echo of the doorbell announced that the late guest was wait ing to be admitted. Excusing herself from the others, she led him toward the corner of the den and drew him down beside her on the davenport. Foolish man, not to notice t he sprig of mistletoe hanging over him like a Damocletion sword! He was dazed, overcome, as indictinctly he heard her murmur, '' Faithless husband! have vou forgotten the oysters for the cocktail?''

!?age One Hun<ked and Sixty-nine


History '22 This world. Dean llulme has told us, Is ,·ery weird and strange(;rotesque. bizarre, in fact. a world Of multiplicity and change . . \nd different kinds of people here I lave different Yiews on lifeTo some a queer collection 'tisTo some, a world of strife. Classicists, Realists, Romanticists are they. And l\Iystics (don't forget them) inward gazing, contemplativeThey say all sin is goodness-goodness only comparative. They close their eyes To 5hut the worldly mirage out That is to pain and sorrow prone . .\nd after weary trial and disappointing doubt They make the Right of the alone to the-.\lonc. -Littl,· .1/ouc.

Night Oh. blessed night that to ou r aching bodies brings repose. And of each troubled fe,·ercd day denotes the close. That to a wearied, strife-sick world gi,·cs peace and rest .\nd sends the winging birclling homewa rd to its nest; Dark curtain drawn to let us sec and liYe But one day at a time . .\nd hide from us the joys and sorrows of our future climb; Protector of shamed and misjudged humanity: II iding place of joys and sins and sorrows; Keeper of countless ages of tomorrows: Em purpled sea for stars and moon to play in; Secret chamber gi,·en for heartsick. humble soul:- tn pray in; Balm sent to cool and sooth and hide an aching heart: Oh night. protector and receiver that thou art!

Pnge One llundt·ed and Se,·enty


II

~TIOKrli ------~

PLEASE 00

Nor THRoW STONES AT T/IE FISHES 6Y ORDER OF ZEUS

Page One Hunllred and Seventy-one


GEM OF T H E MOUNTA INS Th('

(;('Ill

oi the

~lountains

has won it-. rig-ht to exi:-t

h~

ha\ ing

exi ... tc<l through eighteen year::; oi stress and <len:lopment. and 1-.. IHI\\ regarded a.; a :-ummary of the college year. I h purpo-.c i-.. to keep iresh the memory oi student days and carry the Cni\ cr:-it} to thost路 '' ho arc interested enough to read. ' I he staff is elected by the Junior Class. which i.; directly re,;pon-

sihle Jt~nior

for the financing-. compilation and publication. .\!though a hook. it portrays the life of the e ntire L'nivcrsity 111 a way

hest calculated to make it a keepsake for years to come.

Page One llundr路ed and Se,路enty-two


\\"ilkin, on Thumetz

P ;l) ru.·

l'arrdl

Uan ...

I I ann hun

Jlurning

t: ill

(.'ulliJ\t•

ll ob-on

llwora k

l'a~o~"e

Onl' ll undn.•tl and Se,·enty-th o·ee


:O:w:m~t rom

Hosier

THE UNIVERSITY A RGONA UT T he L"ni\'cr~ity .\rgonaut i~ the offiicial publication of the ~tudcnt body. and is publ i ~h ed each T uesday at noon. The Editor and busi ness manager arc chosen from the ~tudcnt body and ha,·e iutt control of the policic~ of the paper. This year the .\rgonaut 1s operating- UIHkr the ne,,· constitutional amendment "hereby the associate editor i-.. ekcted instead oi tiH: editor. and after :-cn·ing for one scmc-.t~·r a:-; associate editor. he automatically become:- the editor in <.·hici. Thi:-; system has done much for the continuity of the paper and as:-ure:-; an experienced editor at the helm. The Argonaut is now a futt-Aedgcd member of the \\'estern I ntcrCollegiate Pres~ ,\ ~sociation . the editor and business manager attending the fir~t convention of the a~~ociation held at the l."ni,·ersit) of Ctah at Salt Lake City in February oi thi..; year. The .\rgonaut recei,·es new~ di:-patches from all the college.... and uni,·ersities of tlw inter-mountain ~tates each week. Pre-.... di .... patches are also recei,·ed from the Pacific :\ ew:- Sen· ice. The policy oi the .\rgonaut 1s to be truly expressive oi .... tudcnt opinion. to car ry al l legitimate l"ni,·er~ity news. and to work con stantly for the u pbuild ing and betterment of Idaho . The .\ rgonaut goes to pract ica lly all of the a lumn i and to all accredited high ~c h ools of the state.


G~uver

nurke

II. Corncli.-.on Boa'

llulx>i.

Zachman ~cntl

Toev,

E. \\'ilkin .. nn En .. ign

Pa~e

O n e ll lm<l n'<l an ti

Hen~nty-fh路e


• lDJ\TlO f.Mtlf~·

Page One Huntl!·ecl and

:-> eventy- si~


T'a~e

One IIumlo·ed nnd Se,•enty-se,·en


(hapman

Hobson

J ohnson \\'can·r

Speedy

The Agricultural Club O fficers

P resident Vice-President Secr etary T reasurer I I an· est Queen -

-

Reuben F. Johnson Oscar R. \\' ea,·er Clare I lobson T homas E . Speedy ::\aomi Chapman

History and Purpose

The " .\g Club .. was o rganized December 10. 1907. for the purpose of promoting the social ,,·elfare oi the students in :\gricu lture. to enrich their knO\\·Ieclge from outsicte sources. a nd to promote greater un ity among t he students regularly enrolled in the .\ gricultura l College. The main issues haYe been " Ag Day .. o r .\gricu lt ural Protlucts Judg ing Day and the .. . \g na,,r. an informal dance fo r the '· Farmers and Far merettes".

Page One Hundre<l and

!4e,· ent~··eight


GR.\1:\ .Tt:DGT:\G TE \~1 } I \\'. I lulhl•rl. Coad1 C \\'. Berryman G. .\ . \\' ieht• R L. Span~:ll·r

History and Purpose of Ag Day . \~rindtural Product~ Judging Day \\'a;; fir;;t authorized h} the Facult} of the . \~ricultural Colle~ in the sprin~ of 1914. The entire day ha;; ;;ince been set aside for the judging of .\gricultural Product'-'. including- fruits, grain;;, ,·egetables, poultry. clair~ products. and li,·c ~tock. Prominent Judges officiate at these contests and render a g-reat ser\'icc h.'' their constructi,·e criticism of the day's \\'ork. Exceptional interc~t i~ sho\\'n by the entire student body. The day is concluded by a banquet at which students. judges. and stockmen gather for a getlt'ral discussion and good time.

\ CL.\:;,.; OF HERF:FOROs

Pa~:e

One Hundt't'<l and );en•nty-nine


STOCK Jl'DGI::\G TE

J. F•' C.

\\"arr~n.

\h(·rnall"

\~I

L. H. Tad< r L Kitch C. \\-. 1-1 ickman. Co•ach

R L JohtNJil \\ 111.

!'~:chance

Synopsis of Livestock jud ging Contests 19 1 2 - 19 2 0 P:1"itic Inl"nl Xurthwt' ... t Li\"t· :\htn\ ~tock ~hn\\

l~ivt·o.;tn:-~

11>12 ICJU

--------------------------- 2 1()1~ 1<115 ------------------------ 2J I'll() --------)IJI7 ---------- ::\oI Show I<II~ ------------- 2 19 19 ---11)2() ---------------------· 4I r:ir,·, Sn•orHb-·------------------ 3 I hinl' ------------ I ( htr

\(":till'

Y:akima

Pullnnn s,,int· Sho\\

\\ c.; ... h rn )~H)

oil

2 I I I

2

2

::\,l Show

I 2 6

Tntal'

2 3 3 3 3

I I

::\n Show

I 2

2

I I

0

()

2 () ()

I I ()

3 3 14 7 I

ha\· · c mpctr:d will1 from two t<l four coli<-){<"' at each con\('''· nanw-

1~. \\ a-hitt!!\1 n Swte College. Orr:gon .\gricultural C< llt•!.(e. ~ l ontana .\ gricultural Collt·~t. L"nin-r,ity < f Briti,h Columbia. tho: L'nivo:r,it~· of California. and the l 'tah

\![rit:nltnral Colkgt·.

Pa){e O n e H u nd red nnrl t-:lg hty


D.\IRY CATTLE JUDGT:\G T IL\:\1 Prof. Davis, Coach Patch

2\lr. :\(organ. Coach Tucker

\\'ohlschl~·gt•l

D.\I RY PRODUCTS JUDGING TE.UI \V. P icr-,on

I. Packenham

F. Stewart

I I. .\. lknd i,.,oJJ, Coach

"AC" COLLEGE LETTER MEN IN ATHLETICS ---------------- 2 Basket Bal'------------ 3 Raseball -------------- 5

Track

Football

-------------- 6

Page One Hundred and I•;I!Chty-on e


Perry

Kt•rshisnik

Sinclair

School of Practical Agriculture SENIORS GLEXX \\'. D:\ \ 'IS ",Wickie"

Filer High School; S. P . •\. Basket Ball ( 1), (2), (3), captain (3); Secretary-Treasurer S. P. A. A. A. ( 1) ; Class SecretaryTreasurer and \ ' ice-President (2) ; President S. P. A . Literary Society (3) : Class Treasurer (3) ; S. P . A. Stock Judging Team (3) : Lindley 1--lall. "Studyi11g i11tcrfrrcs with his fussitig''

PETER F. KERSHlS::\TIK "Prtr"

Carnegie l l. S .. Bridge\·ille. Pa. : Class \ ' ice-President (1); \'ice-President S. P. A . Literary Society first semester (2); President S. P . . \. Literary Society, second semester (3); S. P . . \. nasket Ball (3): Class Secretary (3): S. P ..\. Stock Judging Team (3). "Ahvays 011 the job"

\ "ER:\0:.\" PERRY '·Dracoll"

Coeur d'.\lene 11. S.: S. P . . \. Stock Judging Team ( 3): T. X. K. "Fishin ' not Fussin' ··

ILLTGII

c.

SlXCL\lR

''Si11dy''

Jerome TT. S.: Class President (3); S. P . .-\. Stock Judging rfeam (3): T. X. K. "flc aspires to be a dair3• Hrrdsma11"

Page One Hundred and :Eighty-two


School of Practical Agriculture The School of Practical .\griculture i~ maintained for the purpost' of training the young- men of the state in practical ag-riculture. It is open to eighth grade g-raduates who do not desire or arc unable to attl'JHI high school. lt is also attended by btl} s "ho h:\\ e had some high sdwol \\ork or ha,·e graduated from high school. The course is arrang-cd for thrcc years of fi,·e months each. II igh school graduate~ arc able to finish the work in t,,.o years. The boy:> attcnding the school \\ork on their farms at home during the summer and attend school during the winter months. The school term begins in the fall after thc c rops are han·estcd and ends in the sprin g about the time that spring work begins . . \11 of the College of .\griculturc equipment is a\'ailable for the use of the School of Practical .\griculture. The students get the same kind of work that the regular college students receive except that it is briefer and of a more practical nature. The greatest interest is in Animal llu sbandry. Dairying. . \griculture Engineering. Farm Crops. and I lorticulturc. Each fall a stock judging team of five is selected to go to the Livestock Show at Lewiston to compete with other short course teams. This team has been winning consistently each year. Last fall it took first m·er the l'. of I. Yocational team and the Lewiston Xormal School. The team consisted of Yernon Perry, Peter F. Kershisnik. Fred 0. llorning. Glenn \\·. Da,·is and Hugh C. Sinclair. On the .\nnual .\gricu lture Judging day the School of Practical .\griculture students are eligible to all of the contests. This year they made a clean sweep of the Dairy Cattle Judging Prizes and won a place in each of the other contests. In Dairy Cattle Judging the following men \\'Oil prizes: Yirgil Lickley, first; Fred 0. llorning, sec ond: ( :tenn \\'. Da\'iS. third: Chau ncey B. :\fays, fourt h: Francis S. Coyle. fifth: Ralph lioness, sixth; Edward \ \'. Lundy won second in 1)airy Products: Fred Schuetz won fourth in Grain Judging: Peter F. l'crshisnik \\'on fifth in Fruit Judging. In the .\nimal llushandry con test, \·enwn Perry took third in Shorthorn Cattle. .\ special loving cup was gi,·en by Professor Dickinson. l'rincipal of the School of Practical \griculture. to the high man in either \nimal llushanclry or Dairy Cattl<:. This cup was \\On by Yirgil Licklcy. he ha\ ing won the Dairy Cattle Judging cup also. PractiC'ally all of the students in the school come irom farm homes ancl intend to make farming their bu;;;iness. Returning to their respt.•cti\ e comnnmities a iter one. two or three winters spent in study. the} become the leaders in matters of scientific farming. cooperative mm·emcnts and right li,·ing.

Page One Hundred and Eighty-three


Cutk·r

~lav'

~(, rtt·n-.:n

-

Scln:~:tz

Coyl~:

Spainho\\ l.'r Ll'ttz Burkman Zd1i-h Snawly ll,!lt•

S" 1-ht•r John,ou Bony

S chool of Practical A griculture Class Officers

St'Ctllld } . ,. ,.

Fred Schuetz_ ________________ President_ _____ _ Ru~sel lhtrkman ___________ \ ' ice-Pt·es ident -----lloward Cutlcr __________ ::::ecretary-Trea~urcr

C. B.

~rays

Georg-e (.'itzpatrick _ F. S. Coyle

Class Roll FIRST YE:\R

n()\·ey Burkman Cutler Erick~on

Fitzsimmons I I all ]larding

1[o"e herson F. S. Coyle '(; . . . Hale Ralph I foness

Page One Ilunth·ed and Elghty-fou•·

Tohnson

Jones Keller Koster Lathrop Lenz Lickley Lund.:; SECOXD YE.\R Fred 0. H o ring .T. \\'. In·ing C. B. ~lays

~lcCo\'

~I olen'

~ I ort i n~en

Parkhurst Schuetz Snavely Swisher Tritt Zebish

C. S. Robert · Floyd Spainhower George Fitzpatrick


[G.f!ICI

LITERARY SOCIET Y School of Practical Agriculture First Term

Officers Second Term

Glenn \\' . DaYi s____ ________ __ PresidenL _________ ___ P. F. Kershisnik P. F . Kersh isnik ________ __ \ ' ice-Presidcnt_ ___________ Gienn \\' . Davis

J. :\. Snavely ----------~ec retary-Trea!:'urer ______ __ Floyd Spainho\\"er G. F . Fitzpatrick __ ________ ____ Editor_ _________________ Fred Schuetz F. Spainhower _________ ___ Parliamentarian ________________ c.

n.

)Jays

Ad,路isor Principal Sherman Dickinson

The S. P . .\. Ltterary Society is one of the oldest o rganizatio ns in the school. Sin ce the begi nning it has sen路ed as a means of carrying on the '"extra activities'" connected \\路ith the business of securing an education . . \ s each student enters the ;;chool he automatica lly becomes a member of the society. I fe is el ig ible to Yote, hold office and take part m all activities us ually pertaining to membership. l\Ieetings are held in a central location on every other Thursday e\路ening. Programs are given largely by the members. They are made up of musical selecti<;ms. readings, debates, and discussio ns on timely topics. Busi ness is transacted in approved parliamentary fo r m, t hus giving the students practice in the o rderly conduct of fo rmal meetings. The r eading of the school paper, The Howl. is also a part of the program at each meeting. This paper makes available to all, the interesting news of school activities. A comic sectio n adds humo r to the occas io n. The prim ary object of the society is to g ive the S. P . A . students pr actice in public speaking. It has com e to be realized that a man in o rder to s ucceed in li fe must be able to meet other men on an equal footing. It is necessary to be at ease when speaking. to spea k in a con-

Page One Hundred and Eighty-five


'im:ing- manner. and ·to be able to analyze the arguments oi another. For tlwsc rea~on~. e,·cry Literary member i~ expected to takt• part in the prog-rams. \\'hene,·cr pos~ible. in~tructor-.. in the collegt• or other -..JH:cialist~.

arc a ... kcd to talk on topic-. of interest to the society .

. \ second object oi this org-anization i-. the promoti on ni good iclluwship among ib members. Occasionall~ parties and contests arc promoted and thus each one becomes better acquaintl.'d '' ith the other. \ small membership fcc is charged in order that feeds ma) ht• pwYided at 'ar ious t imes. Interest in literary ,,·or k is keen and many young nH'II ha,·c fini:-h ed the year \\'ith an ability to talk well a nd COI1\'in ci ngly and at the :-am<.' t ime with ease.

S. P. A LITERARY SOCIETY

Page One ll unclt·Nl 111Hl Eigh t y-six




Taggart

Brennan

The Mortar Board Society Officers I>resident_ ___________________________ Grace Taggart \ ·ice- President- _________________ :\I ercedes Jones Corresponding- Secretary ___ .,. ________ :\Iarie .\ndcrson Recording Secretary___________________ Lillian \\ hitc

Treasurer----------------------The :\ lortar Board

~ocicty

Flccta Bn.'nnan

appears on the Jdaho Campus as the

first Senior \\'omen's 1Ionorary Society. \Iembership is based on sc holarship and participation in colleg-iate acti,·itics. Charter Members \I a ric

\ndcrson Florence Hauer La r \'ern Hmc II Flcda Brennan lkrnice Cornelison 1 lclen Frantz

\ferce<il's Jones

Jcan

Ken <Ia II

Oli' e \ferritt Lela l'atch Leta Sabin (;race Taggart Lillian \\'hite

PI\).(<' On<> llunth•etl nntl Eighty-seven


The Executive Board The l~xecuti\ e Board oi the ~l:niversity of ldaho is compo~ed of the officer~ of the . \. S. C. L. one representati' c from each of the various activitic:-;. and one faculty member. This board has charg-e of all dis bur:-;cmcnts of students' funds resulting from the .\. S. L". I. fee paid hy each student upon registration in the L'ni,·ersity. transacts all g-cnl'ral student body business, and acts as a court of arbitration of disputes. The t\. S. l'. I. is composed of all students enrolled in the L'ni,·ers ity. :\membership fee of eight dollars and fifty cents is collected each semester upon registration . The . \. S. C. l. membership card received upon payment of fcc admits the student to all activitie:-; financed by the .\. S. L'. I. Tt entitles him to a subscription to the ".\rgonaut", the l'ni,·crsity student publication, and allows him thc pri\ ileg-e of votingIll .\. S. l'. I. meetings and elections. The general election of officers is held in ~fay oi each ~ear. \ny vacancie..; incurred during the year are filled by appointment of the Executi\ c Board.

The Officers of 1920- 1921 President_ _____ ___________ - ------ \\'illiam Lang-roisc \ "ice-PresiclenL_____ _____________ _ --Ja mes Fox Secretary----------------- ___________ Gladys 11 astic ,,I reasurer __________________ _ { _____ \ "c rna \\'ilkin son ------~ ~ a ri e

11 ummel Debate J\Ianager -------------------- \\' illiam Briscoe Glee Club ".\fanager_ _______________ Boyde Cornelison Business ".\Ianager Argonaut_ ________ llarmon ll osier

. "'_,Janager_ _________ _ { Athletic

----------·' · J.

Priest _ ___ Boydc Cornelison Faculty .\ch·i or _____________________ o. P. Cockerill

Page One Hundred and Blghty-elght


]. II. Fnx V B. \\'ilki11~< 11 \ ]. Pric't

G. Hastie \\'m. Langroisc H. Hosier

B. Co rue Ii '011 :\1. llu11nncl \\'m. Bri,coc

Page One ll unllred an<l Jo;lghty- nine


Eddy

Pl.'tcr~on

Veterans' Vocational Club Commander ________________________ \ . .\. Knut:-.on \ "ire-Commander__ ____ _____ _____

.\1. \\ . .\ldtri<lc

.\djutanL ----- ------------------ -- - 1?. D. Standish \ ' ice-.\djutant_ ____ ____________ _ L. l ~ cldy Sergeant at-. \rms ________________ ____ .\. F. Peterson The \"ctcrans" \ 'ocatio nal Club "·a s organiz\.'d in January. !<>20. by a group of (.'X scn·ice m en "·ho "·ere in training under tht supcn·isi•m oi the Federal ltoard of \ -ocational Education. \\' ith the opening of rolleg-e last fall. then~ a·>pean·d an increase oi \ 'ocat ional men o n the campus. The old Elwetas llott->l' was ..,ccurcd for the new home of the Club. The membership \\·as grcatl~ inrrca..,ed and the organization took on a permanent charact~:r. Profe:-sor l". \\'. Chenoweth wa s elected faculty a<h i.;or.

Pa~e

Onl' llundr('cl and

:-;tnet~·


J

X. \\

\ n,lt.·r .... m \ n,t..·r ... u,

' ' ollt·r

Poul..,on

Curu ..

~l ackey

Rc:c:n:-.

ll an-..~·n

I. IL ll c:mntt"rt llaun II. ~tc-.rc..·y

!'tort:\

14?.!'-bbr(l~•k

\Lt\·n I ~U\~ I e ..

Kitch

ll unw

1.. 11<-mnwn

n aumaun Fof,on

Englo'h C . •\ ndl·r..... m \\ i l{!(lll'

Y oung ,_,., .. l'th

Pag-e Onl' Tluntlrecl nnd Nln e t)·- on e


Cornl'fi,on

\\"orrdl

Yarborough

\\'hitl'

Jones lning

:\krritt

l':na·r

:\1. Clark

Y.W.C.A. Advi~ory Board :\I r~. Catherine len sen :\li~" :\It"· Francis .\. ·Thomps:m :\Irs. :\lr~. \h in E. Entns :\Irs. Cabinet L"ndcrgraduate RejHesentatiYc and Field Repre~cntati,-c

President \ 'ice-1'1esident Treasurer ~ecrctan·

:\lectin~~ . \d\·crti..;ing Rc·>orter !lousing- :-;ocial ~cn·ice Finance \\'orld fellowshi:> ~ocial

J>ng-e One ll undre<l an<l Ninety-two

-

lulia ln~nsoll II. D. :\1 art in \\ aync :--;. :-;noddy l'ndergraduatl'

llelen lohn~ton Bernice C;lrnelison Florence Ilam·r Clara Jones Olive :\ r'erritt llelcn johnston :\ora Yai·bornu!!h Lillian \\ bite . \g-ncs Cox Pauline Rieck Rul)\· ln·ingRub,· Sncncer :\fary Clark


The Young- \\'omen's Christian Association of the L'niYcrsity of Tdaho, affirming the Christian fa ith in (;od, the Fathe r. and in Jesus Chr ist, ll is only Son. our Lord and Savior. and in the lloly Spirit, the ReYealer of Truth and Source of power for life and service: according. to the teaching· of the Tloly Scripture and the witness of the Church, declare its purpose to be:

1.

To lead students to faith in God throug-h Jesus Christ;

2.

To lead them into membe rship and sen·ice in the Christian Church;

3.

To build them up m Christian faith and charade•·. especially through the study of the Dible;

-1-.

To influence them to de\'ote themseh·es, m united effor t with a ll Ch ristians, to making the will of Christ effectiYe in human society, and to extend ing the Kingdom of God throughout the world. Members Xora Yarborough Bernadine Wilson Laura Waterman Lillian W hi te E lizabeth \l'loods Frances W iley Elaine W heeler Kathryn Tabor Doris T ipton Kathleen Steward Alberta Sheldon Ruby Spencer Ruby E. Smith Beulah Smith J rene Starrh Fairy Sanger Gladys Simmons .\lice Swanson Leta Sabin Ernestine Rose E,·adna Roberts Jean Rowlands Lela Patch ~label Paterka Eunice P,ierce Kathleen . Povey Georgie Oylear

Bertha Orford !ofarguerite K ewman Olive :Merritt Esther ~IcRoberts llope Moffatt Louisa Martin Katherine i\l adscn .\nnie l\lor se Louise ?lk?.Iartin ~Iargaret l\lac('y Xora l\Iadsen Jean Little Ruth Litton !of argaret Leuschcl l Jazel Langroise :\ancy Long Jean Kendall Rita Kendrick !.Iargaret Kutnewsky Genevieve Jo nes Helen Johnston 1rene Johnston Clara J ones Ruby Irving Helen Gibbs Rachel Garnby !.Jary Van Gil~e

Edml Goddard Goldie Felton Alice Ficke Harriet Ensign Donna Eggan Edith Dingle Pearl Doyle Agnes Cox Helen Coch ran Bethel Collins l\lary Clark Bernice Cor nelison ;\! argarct Collins :\om1a Cowgill Muriel Carson Gertrude Christen F lorence Bauer Mary C. Brown L1r Vern Borell Gladys Beach Katharine Baird E lizabe th Bartlett Leah Borden Bernice Babcock .\gnes Mac Brown J tllia Adelman Ruth .\ycrs

Page One Hundred and Ninety-three


Cll.\PL.\IX J. ORRIX {,Ol"l.l> Jnterchurch ::ituclent··; Pa ... tdr

Chaplain J. Orrin Gould. Interchurch Students' l'astm. employed h) the !\nards of Education of the naptist. .\lethodi st l~pi scopal and l'reshytcrian denominat'ons. cooperating with the Y . .\1. l'. .\ .. began ' ' ,)J k for the students of the Cni,·crsity of Idaho Decem her I. J<J20 . .\ s students' pastor he cooperates in every way possible with the 1 astors of the chu rches in .\[oscow : encourages church attendance and affi li ated and acti,·e membership; enrollm ent in Bible study in the churches: makes pastoral calls to promote spiritual growth: advises concern ing personal problems: supervises the social acti,·ities at the "\' llut". and has an office open to all who desire friendship and coun~el.

.\Ir. c;ould organized a "Committee of Forty". which is representative of e\·ery student organization connected with the L'ni,·ersity. Thi s Committee endea,·ors to initiate and promote the social and religious life of the entire student body regardless of religious beliefs or denominational affiliations. Through this plan it is believed that the Christian forces of the Cni,·ersity can present a more united and imj>ressi,·e iron and greater em >hasis be placed upon the primal purpose-the <Jc,·elopment of Christian faith and character.

Png~

One IhuHll erl

::1 ntl

X i n et y· foUl'


Sahin

lltnH

i\lerritt

Rieck

Home Economics Club Officers

Oli,·c ~rcn·itt Certrude Sabin Pauline Rieck ~r arie llunt

Prc:;idcnt \ 'icc- President Secretary Treasurer Members Glady" Clarke Gertrude Sahin Leta Sabin Frances \\'ile1 Oli1 e ~lt·rritt. Freda Core >Jormn Cowgill Gcrwview Jones Pauline Rieck Vern a \Vilkinson Gertrude Davis Edit h l~n:hncr Donna Eg!(an Glatha llatficld ?llary r laymond

~larie

Hunt Bessie X ewman Irene Plummer Colette Wolf X ora Yarborough Gussie Barnhart l\lildred Collins Edith Cooper Rachel Gamby Elmerna Gardner l\larcia Giffen Velma Hamilton ~ l argaret Hoyt Agnes Johnson Pearl Johnson

ll:azel J a ne., :\ancy Long llilda ~lac~lillan Floy :\lcCoy \nnic i\!orse Priscilla 1\lunson Louise Nason ,\nna Nclson Olga Nelson Lois Stevens Edith Tall 111an l\l ur icl Tutt le ConstarJCC White Gladys Woodwcrth Fay 1\lcek

Associate Members l\lis~

Jcnst•n

~liss

Lean

l\liss Hyde

~I iss ~~ rs.

Bigelow Franklin

~I r.,. ~Irs. ~Irs. ~Irs.

Scott Davb Cash Xcidig

Honorary Members ~[i,.,s

~Irs. ~lr-.. ~Irs.

French E J. Iddings F. A. Thompson J \. Kcstalek

~Irs.

]. H. Johnson 0. S. Fletcher :\Irs. C. C. Vincent ~Irs. C. A. Wright ~Irs. Dickinson

~[rs.

Page One llundretl nnd Nlnety-th·e


Taggan

The English Club Officers

:\I creede~ J one~ (;race Taggart :\Iarie \nderson

President \ 路 ice-President Secretary-Treasurer Standing Committees PROGRA:\[

II arriet Ensign, Chairman Georgie Oylear Gladys I I astie Phoebe Jane llunt DRAl\1 ATIC

:\I ike Thometz. Chairman Elizabeth \\'oods Esther :\!otic Ted Turner J. II. Cushman

Page One llundr路ed and :Ninety-six

:\IE:\IHERSIIIP

I lelen Johnston. Chairman Lyla !Iarsh llilda Thomas Donald Payne OR IGI 1'JAI. C0:\1 POSITIOi\

Fleeta Brennan . Chairman :\Iargaret Kutncwsky Kenneth lluntcr Kenneth Collin~


The English Club This~ t•ar oi l'J.21 i:-. the fourteenth year that a g-roup oi :.tuclcnh interested in literature and dramatics has been numhert•cl among- the org-anizations in the L'ni' er:sity of Idaho.

In 11HJ a reorg-anization ui the original informal g-roup was effected under the l'ncour·ag-cmcnt of Dr. ~Ioore, ~I iss Brashear and :\1 r. Leh man. The chief aim, howe,·er. continued to he ''to stimulate interest in good elrama, to create a theatre in which to present examples of tht· hl·st l·:ng-lish plays. and to uphold the high standards of this form of cntt·rtainmenl and instruction." In I<Jli-1918, with the introduction of ~lr. G. ~l. :\[iller as head of the I)epartmenl of English, the purposes and membership of the club were greatly broadened. L'nder the new constitution all phases of student interest which might look to the department for encouragement were co-ordinated for mutual help. The membership is honorary, extended as a reward for special ability in English work, or for service compatible with its line of interest. ~fajor students and instructors in the department. the debating teams. the editorial stall of the Argonaut and the "Gem of the ~fountains'', members of the casts. and the producing staA's arc entitled to enjoy its pri\'ileges. ln its practical aspects the three standing committees typify the actl\'tttes of the Club. The Dramatic Committee yearly selects and produces plays, drawing the personnel from the club and the student body. The monthly meetings are in the hands of the program committee. Tt is their endeavor not to make the meeting "highbrow" or merely informatory. They try to add to the enjoyment of the members in various extra classroom phases of writing, of speaking, of dramatics and of literature. The Original Composition Committee encourages the exercise of original ity outside of the classroom in the direction of indi,•idual interest. The success of the club in the winter of 1920-21 and the enthusiasm of its members promises for the club a permanent and enlarging place among the student acti,·ities of the l!niYersity.

/

Page One

Hundn~d

and Ninety-seven


Associated Miners (Affiliat~d

Junior Society of the .\mcrican Jn~tituk of \lining and \letallurgical Engine~r~)

The "~] uckers' Club" is one of the oldest and best knm' n organizations on the Campus. lt meets e,路ery other week fllr business, profe..,sional and social purposes. Papers are fn路quentl) presented by members of the Club. and engit1eers and other mining- men come to ~loscow to speak to the Club on various phases of the :\lincral ln d us try. The "~I uckers" initiated the ,\11-College Smoker on the Campus "ith the .. First .\nnual ~fuckers' Smudge" la:,t fall. It proved a success from CYery point of Yiew. The officers are: Ed. \ . Foran

President \"icc- President Secretary-Trea:-.urer

!lorton ~TcCallic Keith llorning

Members

Dean Franci;, . \. Thompson Robert 1\. Elder F. ll. Laney \ . Kirkman .\. ~1. Jlipcr Jean <;crlough S. ~. Shan fcld l ~d. Foran J. B. Gowan II.S .. \:ers I lorton ~[cCallic lloward Knutson \. L. Simon \\'. K. Horning Clen Saunders John T. ~fcGO\路ern

Page One Hundred an<\ Ninety-eight

\. \\ . Fahrenwald Tom Sickels Karl llonham 1\ob Cumm in s Lynn llcrsey Sigurd ~ampson J.. \. 1\ rown . \ r t h u r ~I c Leod K. Fair\\cathcr D. J. XcYille J. II. ~adar R. Farmin Cuy \\ icks C. \ndcrson F. J. Croteau Richard \ \' estoYer


Simon llorning Ayers For:tn

C um mim•

Shanfeld

llonham

SamJ)>On

Sickels

\\ c,tovcr

Brown Fannin Knutson Hersey

Page One Hundred and :\'lnety-nlne


Farrdl

The Associated Foresters Officers

J. P. Dri .......en J. \\'. Farrell

Prc~iclent

\'ice-! 'resident ~ccrctary- Treasurer -

E. T . .:\cr.1 Membe rs

Flny(l :\1. (o,,ill !larold E. Barto I krman Baumaun Frank . \. Brown Earl 1 ~. Bradfield t\ lht•rt S. Dauit:ls Lioud L. Darrah J. Philip Drissc11 Ll·,fil· E. Eddy Loui' P. Ll·onard Jod B. :\lackey Gcorg-c ]. :.\Iadlinger :\I urk \\'. :\!arkham Jo'l'!lh :\!aru-.ka

Page Two Hund•·e<l

Ha1 ,·ey J. :'.I click \\'cley :\!elzian \\"illiam B. ~lilh:r Oscar C. :\!unson James \\'. Farrdl Frank B. Folsom Harry E. Fuller Charles £. :\lcGrath Kenneth Griep . \rthur S. Guerin Vernon R. Hall Ralph L. Hand Howard Humm

Rohert J ohan,ou L<·ouard :\. Kin!-(' Edward T. :\cro IIL·ury Quentin :\icol Carthon R. Patrie Jack \V. R()(lncr Charlc~ Rowdcr Ralph )I. Rmkr,ill Cecil Ryan J. \Varren Stoneman Willard S. Storm' \\' ilhur T. Stroud :\ orman E. Ta) lor :'.I ichal'l R. Thr0ckmorton


Jr lllh! 11

The Associated Barbs Officers

Reuben F. John:;on

l'r~si<lent

\ ice- President ~ccretary-Treasurer

-

.\rthur I. - Thomas E.

~a"

yer

~peed)

Th~ .\ssociated Barbs. an organization of non- fraternity men on the campus. came into existence in the fall of 1916. The purpose of

this organization is to promote a greater fellowship and solidarity among the men not belonging to other social groups, to act upon matters peculiarly concerning them an<i to assist in the unification of the student body of the L"ni\路ersity. ~Iectings

arc held regularly and matters pertinent to lJni\路ersity life arc discussed. ~ocial functions of the year inclu<l~ a dance, the first semt>ster. and a picnic. the second semester.

Pa~~

'l,'wo Hundr路e<l 路 and One


Creelman

Darlin g

Thometz

Bench and Bar Association The Hench and Bar .\ssociation \\·as organized in 19 12. Its member ship includes all of the students regularly enrolled in the College of Caw.

The purpose of the association is to effect a unity of action

among the students and facu lty and to prc~en·e and enrich the tradit ions of the Ia ,,. school. The association has establi shed and maintained t he ··r lonor System" in the la w school for se,·eral year s : is re=':Jonsible for the ··r_a,,·yer's Court" and other things of benefit to those studyin g law. lt is through the association that prominent lawyer s, jtidges. and men of note in law are brought to the school to speak before its meetings and in this ,,·ay the law school is ke;Jt in touch with new cle,·elo;)ments of the law in the courts of t his state and of the neighboring states. Officers

Ch ief Justice :\ssociate Justice Clerk -

Page Two Hundred and Two

-

Charles Darling :\Tichael Thometz Clifto n Cr eelm an


O'Brien

Channel

DeSmet Club O ffi cers

Percy O'B rien

P resident \'ice-President Secretary-Treasurer

:\J argarct Blackinger

Gladys Channel

F acuity Members ~~ r.

~Iiss ~rae ~fathieu

]. J. Gill

Members ~Ina Armbruster F lorence Armbr uster John Brady ~largaret Blackinger Charlotte Broadwater Albertine Benoit •\Ianzo Brazeau Esther Beiswinger Joseph Cogan Clifford Creelman Gladys Channel .-\!bert Daniels Lucie Davis Rosebud Donovan James Fox .\lcxancler Fox Gerald Friedman Chris Wiesgcrber

:\I argaret Friedman James Farrell Eddie Foran :\fary Finegan Ll'ke F leming .\lex Forrest John Gill Gerald Gill . \ rthur Guerin :\largaret Healy :\fary Hepton :\l;1rie Hummel .\l fred Kinnev Leonard Kinney Benjamin Keane Charles Kelly . \manti Kern

Richard Fox Susan Lommcl Fred l\1 arincau ~ lerle :'\!arkham Joan ~lcCallum Esther ~[otic ~[argaret ).J imms PerC\" O' Brien Patr icia O'Rorke lohn Rodner ~\dclinc Robbins Joseph ine Schreiber Agnes Sweeney Florence Sheppard Michael Thometz ,\I ichael T ierney June Weed \ VarCI " 1yman

P age Two Hundred and Three


Wiley

Clarke

Women's L eague Pregidcn t \'ice- Pr esident Secretary-T reasurer -

(;ladys Clarke Frances \\' iley - Jlcarl Stalker

Executive Board

(;ladys Hast ie Georgie Oylt.•ar

Eleanor Fari ·

Grace Taggart Gertrude Sabin

Women's Self-Governing Assoc iation

In accordance "ith the wish of Dean French the Association of t he lJniYersity of Idaho was organized . \ Council was elected from the women student body constitutio n. Th is was duly submitted and acted upon the Coun cil t he reupon being em power ed to execute t he

Self-Go,·e~;nin~

in April, 1920. to formulate a by the women, laws.

Though t he system is sti ll in the formulating stage. in that it is comparati,·ely new on mu· campus. t he women and the Council . as the representatiYe group of the association. are striving to perpetuate its purpose. "to regulate alJ matters pertaining to the student life o£ its members. which do not falJ under the jurisdiction of the faculty; tn effect a greater unity and a spirit of mutual helpfulness: and to promote and 01aintain the higher standards of uni,·ersity life ... Women' s Self-Governing Council

P resident Lela Patch c;ladys Clarke Grace Taggart

Page Two Hundred and J.'o11r

Lar Vern Borell Leah Borden Evadna Roberts Esther ).Iotie


Thompson

The Associated Engineers

c

I)rcsiden t \'ice- President Secretary-Treasurer

Titus LeClair .\lbert Thompson .\rth ur Sawyer

The purpose of the society is to promote the interests of the eng-ineering profession and to furnish its members with a general knowledge of engineering topics of the day. ~I eetings are held monthly. Members Donald Payne Carl Norlin Alonzo ~ [ arti n Loub Cady A Jr red i\ ndcrson Louis Boas Charles Stidwcll .\I arvin Scott . Charles Anderson Theodore Schwarz Xixon Tertling Purdy Eaton George i\1 unscll . \I bert Thompson \\'illiam Butler Harrison .\rmstrong

Gustav Bjork Henrv Canine Herbert Howe Cha rl es Lawson J ack Woodworth \Vatter York Percy Styner Richard Pierce :\larshall Blair George Curtis Orien Gustafson Richard Johnson Edward Specht Elmer \\'yland Louis Russel

Dean C. X. Little \. R. Webb R. E. Chandler

]. .-\. Kostalek J. H. Johnson F. \\'. Candee

Eric Anderson Edwi n .\itken ,\ rlhur Sawyer Cia re nee II err T itus LeClair T homas Bucklin Luke Fleming Leslie Fulton Hayard I lodgins Roscoe Space Philip Robertson Edwin Peterson Virgil ::\finear John \\'hitenack \\'ittiam Glen \\'alter Wi~dom

Faculty S. J. Kroh \\'. ,\. ::\[urray E. J. Baldwin

noge Two Hundred and Five


.. I .. Club Officers

:\t•il lr\'ing Frank l:ro\\'n

I'resident \ ice- l'resident

- l lcrhert (;Iindeman

:-;ecretary-Treasurer -

Th e purpose of thi s organization is to encourage and in sure clean and pure sportsm a nship in ath letics at the L"n i,·ersity of Idaho. The personnel of this organization includes all men in the in..,ti tution who ha,•c been officially awarded an .. ] .. by the .\. ~- L". l. Members O~m

aid Thmnp~on \\"illiam Carder . \ rnold B rc~hea r-.. llo\\'arcl nreshcar-..

Rich Fox llcrbcrt Glindeman !lorton \fcCallie Endcrse \"an Tine,;en

Ed\\'ard Foran

Paul E"ano; .\ lcxandcr Fox Purely Eaton Jim :\cal Percy o·nricn I 'etc \\'yman Gene l lyde Leo n l>crrine Fe lix l>fastino (;ro,·e r Evans

Ju~tin <; men Carl :\agel Ral ph Breshears Frank llnm n :\lien Brown Gerald Gill :\'eil ln·ing Joe \\' hitcomb Leslie \J oe Elra I Iunter

Fred Craf

Jim Fox

Page Two

ll unth~ l

anll Hix


~'

.~"

,, ~ ,,; ,, ,,I I·

, - I!i1 I

~ll ~;j "'

I

t•

':' ~

.

v'

:· y~

:l ~1 .f ,... t

.'

'

t'I

lil

T

_t, /3 ~"'' , , I

==

I

tY.?. .

I" I

I

~

Eaton

." Gowen \ 'an llocsen \, lrrc"hca" Foran

G. Evan!'; Neal Thomt,wn

I' ..tL , ~ ,.,. ~.~ v ~ I~

1

,.....

G. (:ill

T

v~ ~ • 1

. . z~

~~f ,~.·.·.· ~~- ,~ ~ ~~ ~i 1

,

t

~

R. Fox Hyde P. Evans Plastino Carder R. Rre~h ear ... II. nrc.shears Perrine

I :: l

F. Graf Irving

llunter I. Brn"n Xagd

c;lin(l<•mnn I. Fox

~ ,\,

Fox

~l c('allic

F. llt own O'Brien

\l oe

l''lge ·rwo llunrh I' I nn e!

i'len~n


A. E. F. Club The .\. E. F. Club. as the name i:1dicatcs. is made up of the students of the Cni,·ersity who saw sen·ice m·erseas during the Great \\"ar. The purpose of the Club is to foster the feeling of ie\1 1mship and camaraderie that gre\Y o ut of sen·ing together for the same cause and under the same conditions in a foreign land: to keep green the memory of those of our number ,,·ho will ne,·er come back; and to occasio nally get together for social purposes and to talk o,·er incidents and experiences co mmon to all. Chief among the actiYities of the Club for the year were the Armistice Day ceremon-ies. co nsisting of a Flag raising ceremony on the Campus and a review of the Cadet Battalion by the A. E. F. men, and the A. E. F. All-College dance o n :\larch 18th. The Club membership includes about one hundred undergraduates who sen·ed in France. Officers

President \ "ice-President Secretary Treasurer -

P age Two Hun<ll·ed and Eight

Earl Hunt Greek \\"ells Charles Jennings Keith H on1 ing


Ridenbaugh Hall Seniors

Leta Sabin Jeanette Clark

Edith Starr

(;er trude Sabin Ruth Persons

Juniors

Frceda Core

I 'hoe be Jane l lunt

:\fargaret ::.limms

Sophomores

Christina Baker Edith Hrebner ~farie Jlummel .:\Jarie llunt Julia 1-lrown \rinifred Chance :\aomi Cha)man

Ruth Fredericks Edna (;oddard .:\lary 11 epton Claire ll obson lune \\"eed \iae \\"on路ell

l a nice Lo\\"e . 路11 azel :'IT arcellus l~thel .'\ el son Eunice Pierce l rene Plummer Luc \' 'i'h rockmorton .\lccnc ~fartin

Fre~hmen

Cornel ia Bu r bidge Edna Christie lda Conklin Hosebud Donoyan ~farga ret Dubois Dorothy Flanders ./essie Grigson :\ ellie Green Vh路ian Green Carol ine Gilman Rachael Gamby .\lice Hill .:\Iarjorie Hinckley \'irginia Hanna

llelen llibbs .:\Iary llouston Crace Jacobson . \gnes Johnson Olivine Kenward Ruth Kingston .\lycc Lester .:\larguer ite Lowe .:\Iargaret :-.roylon Rose ~fanful :-.r a rguerite X ewman Violet Noble Carol Xason Ella Paris

Juanita Phillippi Kathleen Povey Fannie R ink Lois Stevens l [azel Stone Gertrude Shepherd Deulah Smith Georgia Stroebel Trene Starrh IT elen \ \'hite Josephine \ \'alker Beryl \\'right Cladys \Yooclwarcl ~[argaret :\lacey

Page Two Hund.-ed and Nine


~lartin

Ch3nce l lob,cm

Worrell ~t'\\man

John-,.c:m

xa....._m

H.:o;mith

Page Two Hundred anil T(•n

I >err

(;.

Ryan

c;n·en \\' ec<l

~nhin

:\elson

~1.

!loll

\\'nghl Lester

\\' alkt•r lhta.tmt•l

BrCl\\U

Hun! Jnin 1.. Sabin

J!t('\Ul:.'f

Jacobson

J.

l.owe

Stunt.·

Christie

)filler

King... ton

Fre.lerick

Pi.:rce-


'larcdfu,

Core

llurhntlge

Coddanl :\lanful

J-;n,lcr:--

Uakt·r

l>awc ...

!'\truehel

(;rigwn

Ste,·en' \\"t><•lworth (;amb)o

!'her>ard

llcptun

IIanna

Phillipp•

St:arl ...

Po\·t)

llihh,

Kenward (;rt.~·n

:Himm-,

lrurdl

lh1ho1'

). l.n""

:\lac">

l>onn,·nn

llin<·klq Plummt.·r


Lindley Hall The ".\s:-nriatcd ~tudents of Lindley l lall" \\as organized in thl· iall oi 11J20 to promote a greater fellowship among the rl'sidents of the :\len's Dnrmitt r~. to pro\'ide for their 0\\n comfort and ha:>;>iness, to ach a nrc and "'tll'ngthen idaho Spirit and Tradition. Lindll~ nlll'

l'aie is :-upen·i~ed by a speriali .... t and arc.,mmtHiatc .... about hundred fiity students and faculty.

Franri:- Jenkins. formerly oi Lindky llall. The fir,.t a:tnual hall

''a~

Bur~ar

oi the l'ni' ersit}. ,.., no\\' I'roctur

gt,·en on the l'\ ening oi I kcembl•r ele,·cn. Officers

I irsl \,.,,,.,,fer

.\,..-,,d ,\, llh'Sicr

Charles \\' arren _____ _________ President_ __ ------------- Uo} d llmkl')· II. \\. Thom-.on - - - ----- _\"ice-president !~elwin \ikcn J. \. l'ut ti,.., ________ __ ___ Secretary __ __________ TlH'<Hlore Sherman J. \. Curtis ___ , ______ ____ Treasurer__ ____ \rthm :\Tiller Members I \\ . Stcnu.·m:w

'Emil ~tun7

\. B. Barclay 1.. . \. 1\oa•

Sullh an

E. F. llradfidd

I ~ummtr-.. \"1ntcm ~\\ j..,hc.·r II. \\ . ThclnP~un \1. R. ThrvrkmMtrn

R R. llre>hcar• Keith Hrownc T. Hurltson I .luycl Burkey C. Carl•on

t ;,

.\.

T. Turnt·r r~.rl \\ anlrop

('harlc• \\ " arr~n \\'. S, \\arnt·r Rul><•t \\' ;on I' \\ irk"arcl Ra) \\'ilknt~•n I \\'hitcnacl. ( Z<·ln,h, Jr. I lunal<l !lick

Pctt·r K:auuta

t:. H . ,\ikcn ( 'harlt~ o\ncll·r .. on I 1-:. .\rm ... tronR \\ \ , Barclay

~0\"

ca ...e

I. h (lark Elmer Clark ~!ott (.lark Frank Cochem< :\lichacl Compton Fred Croteau l ...\. Curti,.., (;Jcnn l>ad .... Ro\' Oarnall lohn 0. o~rr R. f:. Dole \\'ray Oonalci"'n l~urtun Elli-..

rag<> Two l! utHlJ'IHl nn<l Tweh·e

F. c;, Fit>p:ttrirk L. Flilner C. f. Flyg l"nclril \\", ll :tll <>hn llamlin Franci-. Jenkin~ )fr..,.. Franc1' Jtnkiu' 1{. R. folm,un R. L. lohn•on Lancl luhno.,tnn T. Ke ll,r .\. L3r'tm C. 1\.. 1...1w..,un

Charleco. 1-"''" .. nn

Edward Luncl> C. } . ~!acllinger Franci.... )lan'\·illc Chaunce~· ~lay .... 1.. 'lui<IINon Tantt' ~lilforcl :\rthur :\Iiller l>a'\·icl Xcelan

l l, I . Xc·villl I I . ll l'a>nc: ( ;\:urv~· Pt•;u·...on 1-"ranci.., 1\·tcro.,un

\. J.

Pt·h; r'"•Uil

(;\'UI"fl\"

Plt" fC t'

llu\\ anl Pit.·rn· 1-". \. PJa,tiaw J. 1- Pu\\Cr' I I>. Rtm•l><· r g P. f<.t·m ... ht·rg ~ . E. Rink fuhn Rubt·rt-..un 1.. II Ru-.ell ] I ~f.: hncutu'\ t r \\ ilh"lll\

~COlt

.\lar\'in ~c-on T . Sherman Frt".-1 Sin ...cl I . \. ~n:wdy F. Spainho\\t·r


\\'arren Stoneman ~lad linger Man\'ille

('as.· Fit,Jtt:Hrick llr:ultklcl Pu\\l"r'

Turner C1·otcau Rus-ell Compton

'J'Ilr()t'k11wrtvn \\'ilkiii'•OU Stunt/"

llarkc

:\~dman

E. 0. ('lark

T'a~e

rr.·eshear«t ~CV1tll'

Two Hundred and

'rhl~leen


<'· K~m'l><·rg .\hddleton Pit·rctPt·tt·r-..on

r>a~o;e

K. R. John-on Whitenack llerr ~1. Clark

T wo Hundred antl Fourteen

Burle~on

lk>a• K. Bro"n P. Rem<l><:rg

llick Wardr<>fl

II. Palne

.\li<l<llcton

Robttrt'-on

Ftnc

\nn.c;.trong

Donaldson


l)~rn.-1

\1 att'4m S'"i'lu:r Fhtowr

C . . \nder'On L. John~ton Spainhower ~ch,)ono,-er

Hamlin W Rarclay Rink Sherman

Sulh,.an (. Law<on Summer' W ick,.ard

Pla>tino \. ~ I iller Zcbi'h Scoll

Page Two Hundred nnd l!~lfteen


l.owe

Hrl ...cot•

nord I

T he Open For urn l'rc..;idcnt \·icc- I' res iclcn t Secretary Trcasur<•r

Lar \'ern I. Borell \Yilliam nriscoc ~I arguerite Lowe Lloyd Burkey

The Open Forum is unique on the campus of the Cnivcrsit: oi Idaho in being- tht• onl: organization open to all students and in hcin~ the only organization affording to students and faculty opportunity to meet on terms of equality h1· the discussion ni questions and problem" ni mutual intcn•st.

J ts acti \'e mcm hersh ip is lim itecl to studcn ts. but all sessions an: open to students. faculty. and any others who may care to attend. The purpose of The Open Forum is twofold. First. it affords <\II opportunity for the discussion o f any question of real impo rtance and of interest to a n·asonable number of people attending its meetings. Second. it is attempting to do real con~tructi,·e work eithe1· through committees of its o\\n membershi p or hy actiYely aiding other com mittees or working in cooperaticm \\ ith o ther o rganizations. :\mong the constructi,·e acti,·itics that The Open Forum is hack ing through its O\\ n committee:-; or in cnoJ)cration \yith o ther ag-encies rna,· be included: \ mo,·ement to establish a social center at the "Y " IT u·t; plans to bring the Phi net a Kappa Fraternity to the 'Un ivcrsi ty: plans to pr<)\'ide recreation for students not belonging to any social o rganizations o r no t interested in dancing . The meetings of The Open Forum arc hcl<l in the "Y" Hut e\·cry Thursday evening at seYen o'clock.

Page Two Hundred and Sixteen


The Economics Club Officers First Semester

Leslie

~Ioe

Sao11d Semester

________ ___________ P residen t_ __________ __ \ \' illiam Briscoe

Carl :\agel_ _______ __ _____ _ \ ' ice- L'resiclent_ __________ Thurly n Shrontz F leet a lhennan ______________ Sec retary ______________ Evadna H.oberts lJ enry Torsen ______ __________ Treasu rer __ __ __ ____ ___ __ Charles . \liard The Economic Club is a n organ ization composed of st ud ents who are majoring o r m inoring in t he Depar tment of Econo m ics. :\ ssociate membersh ip is open to students in other depar tmen ts of t he L:niver sity w ho are par t ic ularly in ter ested in econo mics. T he purpose of th is club is to d iscuss the social, economic a nd b us iness questions of t he clay. Regula r meeti ngs a re held twice a month, at which times outside speakers a re secured. T hese speakers g iYe the members valuable informat ion in Ya rio us lines of busin ess. O fficers are elect ed at th e first meet ing of each semester.

They

consist o f a Presiden t . \ "ice- L'resid e n t . Secretary and T reasure r.

Page Two Hundr ed and Seventeen

•


Page Two H undretl an<l l~lghteen




Kappa Sigma

Color~

Foumkd D~n·mhrr 10. 1669. at the l'nin·rsit) oi \'irginia. X umha ( r Chapters, xg (;;umna Theta c f Kappa Si~ma ltNalkd 1905 Scarkt. \\' hit~· and Green Flo\\ ~·r: Lily of the \'alley

Frat res m F acultate Col E. R. Chrisman

Fd" :ml :\I. llulme

F ratres m Universitate Seniors l•:nt~·n·

T Knudson \\'illi;;m Langroisc

c;ene H,de Ra!ph Jiu:ohsnn

Rohal llihbard

I lorton :\I cCallic

Juniors l.at ham :\J nore j oh n Sampson Frank Brown

.-\ shley TT. Bivens Clvcle \Villiams J Joward Knudson

C(•ril lh:tn

l ~dga r Ncal

) ll·nry Torscn

Soph omores Phil S. Tolman \ ' ~·rnon \\'alters Eu~oten~· Ostrander L~n·nce \\' allace

\\'illarcl Storms Pern· O'Brien Rob~rt Leitch \'ernon Patch Harold Barto

Fr:utcis Shlneher~er \\'inton •\rnold Cla,ton J loo,·er Ed\,•in Storms Rudolph Gaut

Paul Hill Fred :\Iarineau Chester Xylander \ ' ernon Sti,·ers

1aml·s I r. >Jeal \lkn Brown 1.)1111 lll•rsl')' Lt·o c;. l'rovoq

Freshmen )<N'ph Cogan Eugene Zackman Cha rl c:s Seymour Fred Crandall Eh·a Snow

Pnge Two ll undr·ed nnd Nineteen


F. ltrU\\11

Patch Tor:,en SUO\\

Page 'J'wo H undred and Twenty

\\. S. Sturm' Pro\'u ..t

Ostrandt:r Ryan ll yde Shenel><:rgcr

lloldernnn

l ..:tngrt)i .. ~ Stin.路r... Jacuh~m ~:. :-:~at

Forre .... t

ftlhll'OII

~loor~

Biven ..

trl,ri .... n

Cogan

1t. Knu<l ...dn

J ltnmn

IIIII


Kt·•-r Leuch Willian" Xylandt•r

Tolm:t11

\mulcl t :aut

1~.

~tonus

Sam&>t-.on \\'a'*cr~

U.!rw

\\'rollro<'t• Cr;lmlall ,\JtariiH:~IU

E. Knudson ll ersey Zachman Seymour

l'a:.tt! Two Hundre;l anti Twenty-one


Phi Delta Theta Founded at ~liami l"nin:r,ity lkcl.'mh~;r 26. 1~-1.~ Idaho \lpha < i Phi Ddta Thl.'ta in"tall•·•l 190~ ~\cti,·c Chapt~;·r-•. ~X Fl•m•·r : \\' hit<' Carnation

F ra tres in F acul ta te Se nio rs C. Elnwr Rohl.'rh Franci' 0 \ oung" Roh<·rt \\. Carn•r

Ralph R. Hrl.'"hl.'ar.; lloyd L. Brigham \!fred .\. Kinn~;•y

juniors !.loyd Copdand Cli fton Y. Crl'l'lman l•:lliot \\'. l•:an•s ]. (;~;•ra id :\ letkl'r

I larold E. ~lurrav \lhcrt X. TholllllS< 11 ~lichad .\. Thnml'lz

Elra L. llum<·r II a rold 1.. Simon In<· :\ 1. \\ hitromh t'hri, II. \\'l•b).(<'l'h<·r

Sophomores Port . \ rt IHI r .\rnolcl ]. Br•·"h<·ar, llowarcl R. Bn•sh<·arF. Slll'rman Bn•,h~;•ar­ Ralph ~I \lky

Hrvan B. lkcl"<'ll Richard P. llnwarcl Charll's B. Ienning-' Randolph E. Jcnllt''" Roland ]. ~lc:\ar)

\<Irian (;. :\d,nn ( ;~;·org-t· l't·a r"Hl Charlc' l'itcaim Thcoclon• \\' . Tunt~;·r Catu<·rnn Kim:

Freshme n Virgil F Hl.'clwl.'ll Lynn Beauchamp I<hn F. Bradv \ \ 'alll'r C. Cl;ubhuck John n. lfamilton

Pllge Two Jl undrl'<l >incl T wenty-t\\'O

lkrnard Kt•anl.' Leonard T. K innn· Charle~ T. Kclh · .\rvid :\cbon ·

Lynn ~I Rog-.·r, Donald G. Scott \\'. Stl<'net·r Ston~; llarold R Telford l'<.'llllt'th \\'hill'

c


Roht•rh (;arvc

Youn~~>

F3\·c"t't'"kt•r

Simun

\\'hitcmuh Kinm:v l'huhh<>ck \. lktlwdl ·

11 ami hun

Crlo.elman

Thomel'-

Thornp... tm

:\lurray

.\dr. :\cl-..cn .\lley

Turner

CuJc~laml ~lc:\ar)'

Tdforcl 11. Brt:'h~:u ...

J:. Bt·ch\ ell !"\. lrrc ... hc:lr,

1{. lln·,lu.'ar., \Vhite

~ce-nt

\n·~ei-Xt•bon

f>itc1irn l:racl)

llu"nnl l(ccgcr'


Beta Theta Pi

Color' :

Foundt"d . \ugu~t R H39. at ~I iami l'pin·r,it) X umlwr of Chapt< r-.. /9 Camma Cannu:t of lkta Tht"ta Pi (n,talkd SqJt<·mh<·r 19, 1914 Shdl Pink and Light Bht<' FIOI\'l'r: Tlw Rose

Fra t res m F aculta te J. C

Eldricl!-:t'

F ra tre s in Universita te Seniors

\ J

l'rit",t l{us,t•ll T. Sc:r tt '\t·il lning

]t·,tin B. (;, IH"n. Jr. CharJ<:, II. Darlin·~ lhar'•'' \\ '. (;,.,., uuh Thurlyn II. Sitronlv.

Lt·-.lu: '\ \l<l' l{;oym oncl I. Spang-ll'r l{ohl·rt I . Jnhanll<'-"11

J uniors l'aul II. !l ull l<><· l L Pri<:'t \ \ '. Sanlwrg

1,·an 1.. Pac:k<:nham Frl.'d ~ l. \'t"atdt Lyman K. \\'hittit•r

Earl \\'. Parks \\' tl liam Carpl'nt<·r (,arl \\'. Bonham ClitTord S. ~foe:

Curtis lll.'rringl<>n J• ,.,c:ph .\. Swift Rnhert Eldridge

\h<' (;otT l•:nwst \ 1. llwmak l.t·land \\ Srott

Sophomores R• hl·rt \1. Cummins ( ;l·nrgl' Curti-. Iohn S. (;ill Ru"dl l'ar ... nn-.

Fres hmen llarn Brown Rnyai Ining \\'arn·n G. Xoggle \'an R. Pl:lc:r,.,on Rnl11:rl Grct"n Donald Spang!l.'r

T'n~t>

T wo ll un<lt't><l :ulf\ Twt'n t y-four

Do1· ~lcKinln Rohcrt T Franz ~ run,on Emt"r) Edward Littoo\' George \'. Patia-.nn .\rthur S. Guerin. Jr. ~l<:rle Denn<:tt

Ro..,cn<' R Franz )<

'l'(lh (

~(OOfl'

\\':tltl·r R York .J \ rnnld Cohk\' Thoma-. Bucklin' \\'l·'ll') \ Barton


n. Scott

~ l cKinley

Cobley

(;uerin Sntift R Spangler

.\.

J . Priest San berg Packenham L ittooy Pat terson D. Spangler

Cummins

llucklm r lerr ingto n ~oggle

Creen

"ldridge

nworak Pt路terson Cu rtis Bonham

!l ull Robt. Ftanz

T. Gill Bennett Caq>entcr N . rrving Brown

\ "catch

Barton ~ roore

('. Gcrlough

Parks R. Franz York

Page Two Hundred and Twen t y-five


Sigma Nu I. IR69. al \'tr~ini<t :\I ilitary Ttt-titul<' :\ umb.-r of Ch<tplt.·r,, X5 Dt.·ha Omicron of Sigma \u. llt-talkd :\lay 22. 1915 Hlott.·k. \\'hill' and Cold Flowl'r: Foumktl

Color':

Jam·<tr~

Fratres

tn

\\'hitc Rn-...

F acultate Ridtanl \\'. \\\•,lfln•r

Frat res

tn

Universitate

Seniors Fdtx \ l'la-un.• \\'illiam II Cankr Bm tk \\' Cnrtll'li'' n ( ;rin t.•r C 1-:,·an,

) Pal'l E\ attl!oward II llan,t.·n Carl F. \'at.:<:l

,_.,..

~,.n

r,i,d•

Frl'cl E. Crai Kt.•nnl'th :'\1 llumt•r Tiws C. Lt•Ciair J• hn GiJbnn Stalkt·r

Juniors \lhl'rl J. Craf Kt.'IIIH.'I h . \ udt.·rtou On· a! ( ;;u·ri,on

l;arl E. llunt II ow a rcl D. I h·cht lll'l'

1il'rhert L. (;lituk•tnan John I l. \\'atkin, Clayton B. \\\..qm,·r

Sophomores Frt.·d ll. Chaml>~:rlin Harold •\ . Dan \nhur B. Fid.;t.·

I It'\\ ani :'\1

:\I cCuaif.! \\'illiam \ (;;tnin Otto \\' Schrot·•kr .\mancl ). Kt.·rn

llarold \ . lla\III<IHl Rex K immd . Lt.·o \\ ... Schrn·•kr

Freshmen Cl'r rgc Cl'cil \ . llnliou Burton llarold II. Cornl'li..,on Darwiu Erick :'\1. l.t'itht• \\'alter Knt.•t•lotncl E. Parkt•r Gu~ta\· E. Rjork

Page Two IIunch·f'd an41

Tw~nty- ~·:.ix

Peter P. Dru' Gu,· P. \\'icb G. Symtts .Tack B. :'\lusst'r L0 well \\'. J."liuwr C. Cast:holt Frank 1). Kiuni,;on S. II oiTman

L.

~ l unson


F. C:raf Carder Dart Chamb<.路rlain

llcchtner \. Crat K1nnt:,on Flotner

\\路e ... ton:t Hano;en Kimmel

Lei the

Pt:...unu P. Jo:,路:ln' II uut :-:.inh

Kitch Xagd Carri ..nn Park,路r


(;'uuh.·mau "cCuaig \ttlt:rtun Fur an

Watkin, LeClair 0. ~chrot:der H. Ct)fflt:h .. un llavmtnul \lu.._.., ... r · L. ::.chrot-<h:r (~. ..:, :.n ...

I':lKti' 'l'wo ll un<lr\'<1 :mel Twenly-ei):'ht

I IutTman

llart J:jork

It

Curm h

I ...~bolt Ficke \\'ick' •lll


Sigma Alpha Epsilon Foun kd ~larch 9. 1856. at the l"ni,·er~ity of ,\lahama :\umhcr ci Chatlter~. 91 Idaho .\lpha of Sig-ma .\lpha Et>-ilnn Intalk I \ IH'Illht·r I. 1919 Cnlor' : l'urplt• ami ( ,o)d Flmn·r. \'iolct

Frat res m F acultate ). E. \\'odsedakk

R. ll.

Crot~

Frat res m U niversita te Se nio rs T.t•on I't·rriut· C:n·l 1.. l'alt'h

Fred D. Stewart \\' illiam C. Butlt•r ) . Clarke Rush

:\kn·itt \ '. Penwdl \\'. l'unl~ Eaton

]. O;,wald Thompson Louis C. Cady Leroy \\'. Thompsr n

Clan·un· 1\:. l lcrr Eel win I), Pl'll'rsotl

Juniors Sig-u1'<1 Sampson l.ylt• :\1. Cnlhor n

S ophomores Frt•d \\'. :\Iathon !-larry .\. :\fc"ingt•r Paul Rl•t•d Fn·cl I' Brandt Gu,· 0. Penwell Jack \\'. Rodswr I knry R. Schuldt Ke;meth \\'. \\' illiams llnward B. Blodgett Le" j, C Pritchard ]. \\'arn·n Stoneman

Freshmen \lfrcd :\1. .\ndcrsou Bert \\'. Bowlby \\'alst•r S. Grcathou~~.·

:\Iurie ]. :\!arkham :\lalcolm ~IcKinnon Charles Preuss

Clydt· I I. Richards \\' clcnmt• D. Garlock Joh n Trautman

Page Two

Hun~oh·e<l

nnd Twenty-nil)e


l'alch 1•. Thomp,on \\"illiams (;. Penwell

Perrine Hu<h

Reed Bowlby Richard,

~larkham

l'rtu'-'

Page Two Hundred an1l Thll"l)'

~~e-~singer

Buller Eaton Rod ncr (;a,lock Schuldt

Pe1erson Cady ~1. J>enwell Prichard Trautman \\"ells Stunt. man

ll~rr

Blodgt•H Ste,\art ~lcl.ean

(;n·athml"'t.•


Phi Gamma Delta ~lu

Iota nf Phi Gamma Delta Tn~talkd ~larch II. 1921

Frat res in F acultate

J:tm<:' J. Gill

Henn· Schmit? h.t·nm·th Collin> Geoq.:<· ~I. ~I iller. Stet>h<"n J. K ruh

Frat res m Universitate Seniors I larold S \1er' Carl \ llurk.e

Ja me' H. Fox

\ ll••·rl S. Danil·b \\'alliam S. Bri,;coc l'aul ~1. l~llis Jaml'S \\'. Farrell I{ it-hard \. Fox

C~:rald

Ralph R. Rowdl William \\'. Suth.. rland

l.•·on B. 'I a \lor !Inward \\ . Stapks

Juniors \ \'. Frit·dman (;crald ). Gill \\'. Keith l Jorning Buford E. Kuhns ~larshall B. ~lncey

!.1 n \\. :\ash Sianl.·y I. Phillippi Paul T. Rmn·ll l'aulnwr S. Sodnhcrg Osrar R. \\\•:t\'l'l'

Sophomores :\ I;u·shall L. Blair Ett~l·n•· I f. llramhall Ralph S. Bristol Carl II. Brown

Charle:; R. Chick \kxander j. Fox llan ld C. Cevcr Fred F. Jloniing

F. I\ run· Johnson \'aughn \ Prkt· Wt·sl<') F. Phillippi Thom;t- :\ Sickd-,

Freshmen :\lark Bristol llt•nn E. Canine DwigiH Kuhns Ct•nrgt• Gahan

Stanley Johnson \\'illiam Parn ~!arion Rettig Gordon Staples Ehrsel Frahm

l'hiltp Tall Ckn R \\'ilkison J• hn \\'illiamson \. B Wallace

Page Two 1Iundred and

~'hh·ty-one


Hrt)\\ n

Blair Sickel'

M. llri,tol

Rettig

W. Plullii>PI F. Horning 1>. Kuhns Price lframhall G. Staples Wallace Frahm Gahan S. Johnson

Page Two Hundred and Thirty- two

Chid..

Geyer

R

nrL...tul

Wilki'<ln

Williamson Canine

Parry

Tate


]. Fux

l>anoel'

"·

B. Kuhn,

.\ yers Friedman Phillippi R. Fox .\ . Fox SoMrberg W<!aver

l lorning

Elli• ll. }ohn•on

s.

P.

II. Slaplc ... :\a,h

l~o"dl

Burke Farrell

Ta)·lnr Sutherland

:\IaCt")

R. Rowell G. Gill

P age Two Hundo·ed a nd Thirty-three


The Elwetas F o un<ic:<i 1915 Colo r':

Flo\\ l'r :

l'urpll· ami C •Ill

Rl·<i Carnatinn

Se niors Ilarmnn E. H•"ic:r ::\1. Fdtnn

J,

R u \ al \'. Starr

C. ·H. Swan-.t ro m

.\lfn·cl :\d,..n \\'illiam E. l'l'l·hancc

Juniors

J an~t''

B. Tier

Sophomores I kwL'Y Patton

Philip Rohcrto;on

c;l'Of'!.(l' Ttu:kc:r

Clan· II. Low<'

Ehnt•r \\')Janel

Freshmen Tlll'nclcll'l'

J.

Schwarz

Ct•nr~t·

Bahr \\ ilmt•r 0-.h••rnt• Clan· Tbin

Page Two H undred a nti Thl r t y - fou •·

llurns :\I ohlc:r Char leo; •\. Sticlwdl Burton \ ' anTa-.,t·l lamco; Requa

) ,, 11 11 Slt'\\ art ){·, lliu Fannin L I. :\I ohkr Rkharcl L. John-.tnn


Ha1n

!'tarr

\·an Ta ......d I

\lnhkr

Stu(\\ ell Patton tlu~icr

Stl'\\art

lkr =''\3f1'1trom

J=-annin Haker

Pt·chan\'C \\'ylou<l TucL:t·r

O ..hurnc B. ~ldhler

To"'"

l<t·<tun Fe hun

Pill{(' T wo ll undred un tl 'l'hil·ty-tl ve


Phi A lpha Delta Professional La,,- F raternity. Founded at \"orthwestern Gn iYersity . 1888 \"umber of Chapters. 37 Kent Chapter of ['hi .\lpha Delta ln,.;talled 191-1Color s:

O ld Gold and Purple

FJm,·er:

F ratres in F acultate

James

J.

Gill

F ratres in Universitate Seniors

\ \"m. II. Langroi,.;e Emery T. Knudson 11. E . lloiser Latham C. :\ [oorc Fred E. (;raf Carl .\. l~urke .lames II. Felto n Juniors

E . J. .\. J.

Kauffman Craf E. :.\I. Wilson C. II . Swanstrom Ge rald J. Gil l Sophomores

Floyd Eichelberger \ ·aughn :\. P rice Rex K im mel \\'illiam :Xixon \\·ayne Barclay Robert Leitch

Page Two Hundred and Thlr·ty·six

Red Carnation


l.angnuse Knud"ion

.\. <:raf Eichell,.,rg,路r

~W311MI"Uil1

\loore

I (osier

F. Craf

1\'urke

Felton

<:. {;;n Price

l'af.(e Two Hundred and Thh路ty-xe,路en


Alpha Zeta Fe~undcd

( 'olors:

October

.?~.

1897. at College oi .\grindtmc. ( >h1 L'ni\-cr.... ity

>

:--tare

Idaho ( haptcr oi .\lpha !.:eta lnstallt>d .\Ia~. I'J20 .\I au\"l' and ~kY nluc Flower: l'ink Carnatiou F ratres m Facul tate Dean E. J. 1ddin~s Dean F. (; . .\Iiller Prof. H. 1'. D<\\is l'roi. R. K. ll 1nuett

.\fr. II. P .

.\fagntJ..,tlll

F ra tres in Universita te Seniors Leon Tayl 1r

Elmer E. ]{ohcrt-.. Raymond L. ~ Hlnglc:r Loren Kitch Franci" 0. Young" Felix .\. I'Ja.;tin > R. \·. ~tarr H. F. John:mn \\'alclo \\'. l'krson J uniors

Paul T. Rowell H. R. Hm\·cl l 1\uford 1~. Kuhn:0. R. \\'ea\·er Thomas E. ~peedy

L. \\·.

Page 1'wo ll un•lrt>tl and 'rhln::-eitdlt

~anberg


h.uhn'

Starr Pit·r.,..•n

Pla-..t1no

S1>eedy l~ohert ... ~pangl.:r

Young...

\\~~aver

P.

~anbt'rg

Kitch

l(u\\\.·11

H. Hcmdl K. Juhn...cul

Ta\lnl!"

l'a):"t' Two

llun•lt·~•l

nnd Thl,.ty-nine


Page Two Hundred and Forty


The Etcheverry Club rhi- ,, a sn·n·t orwtlliz;l1ion--n 'ccrct. in fact. that not n t·n it- llll·lllht·r~ know au~thiul-( ahout it.

'I hb prof< und :-ilt:nco: can he explained in no otlwr \\:ty-th<')

don't know. \ ftt·r tlw "'''ion i, < \'l'r the "'"no: 'l'l'rl'C) prt·\·aib. :\'o ont• knows what ha" takt·n place. \\' hen you ask an Etcht·n·rQ man what his duh stands for ami lw says "I don't know", don't accuse him of lying. lie is tl'lling you till' sincer l'St truth. all

,\nd thc:rin lit•s the rl'a,.on for the profound "t:cn•t'Y·

"IHHil'l') ",

The llll'lllhcrs arc

having ht'l' ll takt•n into the Club for tht• \'t• ry ,.uOkit•nt n·ason that they

\\t'rt• already tht•rt•. Tht• ydl is

H'l')

simplt:: so silllt>le in fact that it i,. almost idiotic.

It con~ist;.

only of tht• word "Etcht:\erry" yelled in uni,.on three times, t•ach timt• ht•ing louder than tht· la't; tin": "dchcn:rry, l'lcfr,·<·crry. ETC II EVERR'\ !" and then three timt·s mon· in a diminm·1Hio. lkautiful and effectin: in arou,.,iug Etd~t•n·rry himself into mon• furious attempts to -.how his ~upcriority

to

the "ho111:r)" memhcrs by

till' usc of sud1 word.., as "rl'capitulate". "diametrically < ppo,it,·", and such phrases

a.., "t ht• ren•rs<' is true".

Etclle\·crry himsd f. after

which

honorahlc g<•ntleman

(I h·;l\ en n•st his -.oul) thi,., organization has been named, has in turn hecn named

for a wield) known Irrigation Engineer. whom he admin·;. nu"t lwartily.

In fact,

Ill' ha,., st·t him up as an ideal. and whcncn~r caiiNI ut>on to :n1W•'<'r a question, in\ ariahly sap. "\\\·11, yon "'"· T dont likt• to commit mysd f.

h;l\ l'n't

Ill)

Etchev<·rry

\\it h llll'". 'llw fa\·orill' attitudt• of the Club nwmhcrs i-. an appro,imation of that of the Sk~·ping lkauty. until Etch<:Ycrry calls somt·one hy

nanll', ancl thus arousl'S him Tn

~·nough to lisll'n to a qm•stion, say "T don't know" and thl'll rcstlllll' tht• attitiHk

my 1nincl's t•ar I can hl'ar the unin itiated say. " \\'h y wash' good tim<.' in such a (.'luh? You don't accompli"h anything". That b all \'t:I'Y trm·. n1y ckar misinformed ;uh ism·s. hut think what a IH:autiful chance for recupnation fmm tht· fn·n/.it·d whirl of Cnllcgl' l.ik. Oh, I would that I had the power to 111akc yotl Si.'C how we look forward to thl· ront<•nll'd, soulful meetings of the Cluh, whic h an·. h) rommon con ,,·nt, ckdicatt•d to \lorph<·us. The \fotto.-thl' '\\·11.-ancl tht• l'urposl', ·aro: they 11111 sullicit·nt to t•all forth tht· nnfJUl'stionl'd 'upport of ih llll'lllht·rs? Of course. tht') 'II hl· loyal. Tht·n· is no othl'r way to ht•. until aftl·r e'amin:ttions.

l'aKt> Two ltuncl r c<l anll F orh•-on e


Page Two lh;ntlre 1 an 1 Forty-;wo


I

e: s



Gamma Phi Beta Founded \'u\clllhcr II, 1874, at thl· l'ni\erstiy of Syracuse Xi of Gamma Phi Beta Installed :\member 22, 1909 Number of Chapters, 24Colors: Bu f( a nd lhown Flower : P ink Carnation Sorores m Universitate Seniors Glad\' Clarke Virginia lkrmott

I kkn Frantz .\h·rcc:dc:s Jones

Juniors TT elcn Bloom Leah Ronkn

Eleanor Fari-. Lyla II a rsh

llc:s-.ie Xewman Verna \\'ilkinson

Sophomores Bernin• Bahcock :Mary Ball Albert ine lh•noit .\ I argaret lll·al)

;\l;try King :\1a rga rt•l .\ I osl'll') Esther .\folie .\lary Owings Eh·a \Vilkinson

llelcn Robert, ) t·an Rowlands V iolet Seclc'· Lila Smith ·

Freshmen Gussie Barnhart .\!axinr Billing'

.\Iildred Collin' Agnes Cox Edcna E d w:mb R uby Gates

.\largaret Lt·u-.chd Susan Lommel Loui:-c .\!c.\lartin Esther .\[orris Tcan .\!orri s Louise Xason ] oan l\ rcCall um

Hc:Jcn Patterson Dorothy Shallis Pl'arl Stalker Elizabeth Thatcher :\ell Carscallcn llazd Stone


(

Smith

Babcock ~halli~'

Nason Cox

Rowlands

~ldlartin

Benoit

Patterson

Page Two Hundred and Fo1路ty-four

Edwards Stone

l>c!nnott

Lommel

Clark Thatche1路

Bloom

King

narnhart

nil lings

Owings Healy


Fari~

~lcCallum

Rob<·rt' Smith

Ball

llortlt.•n

\·. Wilkiuson

;\lose ley ;\!orris Carscallcn

Scclc) lla"h

jones

l.<'li'Ch<·l XC\\Jl131l

Stalker

llun+~

;\I otic

Gatt:-~

Collins

E. \\'ilkinwu Franl7

Page T wo Hundred and Forty-ft·'•


Delta Gamma Founded

Colors:

1872 at the L'ni,路crsity of :\fississippi X umber of Chapters, 30 l nstallcd Delta Gamma September 16, 1911 BronZl', Pink and Blue Flower: Cream \\'hite Rose 111

Sorores in U n iversitate Seniors Edith Dingle .h-an "-t'1Hiall

Gr:1cc Taggart France' E. \\'ile)

Juniors Julia Adelman

Ruth Ayers

Sophomores Elizabeth \Vuod' Dori> Tipton

:\Iargaret Kutn~w-.k) Clara Jone-. Elaine \\'heeler

Lindy Collins :\largaret Ostroot

Freshmen Hazel Langroi~e :\[artha i\liller Frances Konold Esther McRoberts Josephine Schreiber

Page Two Hundred anll Forty-six

Xora l\Iad;,en Constance \\'hitc Amy Barstad ~larcia Giffen Goldie Felton Grace Farrar

Kathryn Baird Esther Beiswingcr Dorothy Parsons Margaret Collins Louisa Martin


1\enclall Felton :\ladsen Dingle

Par~ns

Collier lrarstacl L.angroi4oe

Giffen

\\'nods :\Iiiier Kutnew:;ky

Schreiber Tipton L Collin'

White .Tone• :\lartln \\'ile)¡

'fcRobert~

Raird \1. Collins Rei~ winger

Konold Taggart Ayers Ostroot

Page Two Hundred nnd Forty-seven


Kappa Kappa Gamma

Colors:

Founded at .\lonmouth C.>llcgc. October 13. 1R70 ncta Kappa Chapter Tnstallcd February 26. 19 16 .\ ctiYe Chaptt•rs, -+7 Dark and Light Blue Flower. Fleur de Lis Soro res in Universitate Senio rs Fh:\'ta ){ Bn:nnan

Lar \'ern Bordl

Juniors Lucie If . f )a\'is Thelma llan: Gladys l fastic

£,·adna Roberts \largan:t Fricdtnan J m•:t. B. Salll-(l'r

,\gncs 0. Swce11cy Gertr ude 0' Kccfl· Pauline II. Rieck

Sophomores Glad\'' C Channel \Iary Finegan

. \deline Rohhins Dorothy Cage

Trma Spielberg Glatha Hatfield

Freshmen Florence •\ rmhruster Fairy Sanger Charlotte Broadwater P r iscilla ~ lt1nson

Page Two H undred ancl J>orty-etght

Kathryn Tahor Grace Mor~tan Patricia O 'Rorkr \ fyra A rmhruster Gladys Sin11110ns

. \lice Ficke 1 rope \loffatt Edith Cooper Aneita White


Rr~nnan

Rit:ck )foffatt Sweeney

Hroad\\ater

Da"i' 1. Sanger )fun'<)n

Spielberg

Cooper

Simmons

l{obert>

Hastie Friedman

Robbin• Hare

Cage F. Sangtr Tabor Hordl ~I. .\rmhru.,ter ~forgan O'Keefe Ficke F. .\rmbruster Finegan

Channel

Pa~e

O'Rorke

Two Hundred and Forty-nine


Kappa A lpha Theta

Color~:

Founded January 2/, 1870. at Jkpauw l·ni\'cr:--ity I: eta Theta Chapter ln:--tallcd :'II a~ 14. I <J20 . \ctin Chapter~. 4R Fl<m cr: Black and (;old Pansy Black and Gold Sorores m Universitate Seniors

Flnn·ncc Hautr \ li<:l' l ~dgt'l'OJllh

Erm•st inl' Brown

.\lice Bcs~ee Lillian White .\lice Swanson

Lda Patch O li ll· ~ll-rritt \ ntoim•t tl' Kitch

Juniors I kil-n Cochran Cl·Or){ic Oylcar ( ;l'rt nHil· Christen

Ernc>tine RoM~ .\leta Green~

( aadys Beach Ll·na Schott ln·ne Jrhnston

Soph omores Hl·thd Collins

).Iadclinc \\'all .\label Patcrka

Freshmen Elizabeth Bartlett Rita Kendrick .\lary VanGilsc

Page Two Hund•·etl and Fifty

Xancy Long Katherine .\ladsen

Bertha Orford Ruby Smith Jean Little


\\' all

Patch ("ullin ..

Oylur

llauer ("hri .. ten

Little ~:ggan

Cochran

lkach

Orford Edl[ecornb

Paterka

.\ l ad~(.;n

Schott Kendrick

Lung

:'nuth

\·an Cil\t;

Bartlell John.."-H.Ul

Swan"'C.m

Hrn,,n

~l erri tt

c:ret·nt• \\' hitt

l':.t){('

'l'wo ll un<ll"ed nn<l Fifty- on e


Omega Phi Alpha Founded ::\farch :;, 11J20

Color:-:

Purple and

Flow~r:

~ih·er

\' cllow Chrysanthemum

Sorores in U niversita te Juniors llclcn John-.ton Gene,·ic\'1.' J one' Ruby lr\'ing :\onna Cowgill ~ l ary llrl'wn

Sophomores F lon·ncc Gran'' Ruth Litton \'era Lus~ .\h·ina :\[cyl.'r

Freshmen llazcl Jon~~ Dorothy ~IaiiN ~larjoric Pierce ~largar~t

Pa!-(e T wo H u n <h·ed and Fi f ty -two

Bl.'rtha Smith . \m~

Roll'<'

Eunicl.' H. Lin!{

Hoyt


(·o\\gill lrnng \lt·yt·r l.\1'•(.•

Juhnston

.lone'\

Gra'"es

Card ncr

J>i~rcc

~mith

Ling 'fallct

lone--, Bou....e

Liunn

Hoyt

l'llg'(' Two IIUIHh'l'<l :\lltl

~'i(lY·lh•·ee


Alpha Delta F()unded Fl'hruar:

.~.

J<J..?J

[;Jowers: .\aron Rosc.: and Lil: ui the.: \ allc.:y

Sorores in Universitate Seniors Harriet C. En-.ign ]c y Crochtt

juniors Beulah l>an~ Elizaht:th Sanddnt• .\gne' ~l;ll' Brown

Sophomores Eunice Pierce :\aomi Chapman ~lary 1-lt:pton Edn;1 Goddard

Fresh men Tht·odnsia llamihon lh·at~ice \lhri!( ht R;tdlcl (;;unhy . \l yCl' Lcst(.'r

P:tge Two llundt·Nl and Flft~·-follt'


J:n.;,ign nrown

llt•JUUII

Cn.ckt'tl

Sandeliu...

H:un•ltnn

Gam by

Chapman

Pit• ret·

.\lhriglu

Pag(' Two l l undn•'l and Firty-fh·e


Sorority Panhellenic The \\omen'-; l'anhellenic .\ssociatinn ni the L'niHr:-ity oi Idaho "a~ organized in l<JJ2. The purpose oi the organizati.m is the regulating oi all matters of common interest to the ~ororiti<.·s on th<.• campus. Officers

Florence llaul.'r

Prcsidl.'nl \'icc President ~ecrcta ry-Trca Sll rcr

Clad)~

lla~tie

(;race Taggart Members

f\af'/'11 f\af'/'<1

(,·111111111/

Ccll/111'11

(;la<lp l rast ie Lncit· Davis

/lt'lcl

1\a/'/'11 .1/plw '!!tela

/)c/la Gamma

Flort•uct· llam·r Genrgi1: ()~!t-ar

Fr.tnce' \\'iley (;ran: Taggart

Olltt'!J" l'!ti .1/f'lta

Ruth Litton

:\orma Cowgill

. llplw Dcllt1 ] oy Crockett :\lary I l~pton

Pagl' Two II u•Hh·f>cl nncl f.'lfty-slx

/'ftj

Eh:anor l.'arri, lk,,it· :\l'\\ ma 11


·.

':\'ewman

Egg an

\\"ilkinsnn

l lunt

(;. Sahin L. !--"ahin

~ l erriH

c;. Jone:o.

Phi Upsilon Omicron l'nf,·.fsioual /lome Econamio l·ral.-ruily

Colors:

Founded at l'nnc~~ity o£ ).Jinm,t.ta Fdtruar) 10, 1909 Zeta Chapter Installed .\lay 2.2. 191~ .\cti1·e Chapter~. 7 .\lumnac Chaptu,, 3 Yell, w and \\'hill' Flower: Viokt

Honorary Members .\lis;; Tt·,<ie .\1. llool'er ).lj~, Hallie fly ll·

.\(j,, Cor:t lren:: Lt:ihy

.\I i" ,\my Kelly .\I iss Catherine J cn,t•n

Seniors Oli1·e .\I err itt

Gertrud: Sahin

Xorma Cowgill

\·,rna \\'ilkin;.on Gcnc1·ie·:c Jcncs

Be~sic

C'atha -latficld Dcnna ::gga:l

L::a S01bin

Junior!! Padinc Ric<k

Sophomores X cwman

.\la~ic

l'. t.~C

Hnlt

Two ll .: n 1:·c 1 nn 1

Plfty-st•n~:


Wise and Otherwise Few women a rc satisfied until they get a man, a nd fewer after they get o ne.

...

P u ppy lo\路e

IS

*

*

the bcginn i ng of a dog's life.

* It took a thousa1. d years to make a man out of a monkey. but it took only a n hour for woman to make a monkey out of a man.-Sun Dodger.

*

*

*

The old-fashioned girl u:-.ed to stay home w hen she had nothing to wear.-Yirginia Reel.

*

*

Unless you happen to be opportun ity. do n't Knock.-F'r iYol.

*

*

If an education makes a person refined. why is a college cou rse?Jester.

*

*

*

*

*

G irls a re bobbing their hair now-largely because there is nothing left to take off.-Punch Bowl. The dynamite business is booming. T he icc bus iness is still firm at the ); . Pole . nut it takes guts to s tart a musical string factory. Education-11rine. women a nd song.

* Th e shortage of petroleum may be a burning question . but we stiil insist it is a light s ubj cct.-Pun ch Bowl.

* Eat. drink a nd be mer ry . for tomorrow we haYe hash. Three things wait fo r no man-time. t id e. and the jani to r 111 the che m bu ilding.

If you can't change th e world shor t change it.

*

Let us prey.

*

Somehow w e always need what we want wo rse than we want what ,ye need . * * * There is no t im e like the present except the last thousand yea r.;; -and perhaps the next ten .

Page Two Hunclred nnd Fifty-<'!l:'ht


I ':O~t'

Two l!un<l n•<l an<l Fttty-nlnt>


AFTERWORD (~entle reader, approach this section with kind feelings and without malice aforethought. If a joke is old. remember that age should be treated reverently; if it has one foot in the g ra,·e, feed it to the worms; if it is prehistoric, remember tha t history repeats itself; if a detecti,·e i~ needed to find the point. pass over it in silence. lt was the intention of the editor to el iminate all of the jokes in these classes. but the htaff ins isted that certain jokes were now a part of Idaho tradilions, to be handed down from one Gem to th e nexl. So, let us follow in the footsteps of our illustrious predecessors.

,\nd we might mention in passing that op1n1ons <lifTer on the subject of jokes. ~o engineer or pre-med will hesitate to admit that the lawyer is the biggest joke on the campus (they being envious of t he latter's parking space-by t he entrance to the library). \\' ho would not laugh at the futile effort of a pre-med as he stumbles down a dark alley after cats? The engineers arc a more subtle and ~cientific people. Louis Cady with the able assistance of John Gill recently opened up a new era in the realms oi chemistry when they disco,·ered that ice was ~oluble in H20. yielding. after complete solution. concentrated J I0 I f. The electrical engineers are now perfecting an electric motor that run~ without electricity (they have already been successful in producing one that will not run with electricity). The a g. bunch is very cxclusiYe-society demands it (that is. society "ith the cows and pigs demand it). Between the hour of 12 :40 and the .\d building. ou r Co-eds arc the center of attraction . especially on windy clays. that is, they seem to attract the wind. I [oweYcr, we ha,·e been dwelling too m uch on the intellectual side of college life; it is an unwritten rule of Idaho';; child ren that their college ed ucation come first and studies afterwards. The chief source of this coll ege education is found in fraternal and sororal life. To ~ive the frat men and women a better understanding of each other and themselves, we are s ubmitting th e following information:

PHI GA MMA DELTA The biggest men in the L-niversitv are Phi Gamma Delta~. for in..,tance Bill Sutherland. They are called Fiji~ becau~e. like the Fiji i-.landers. they are isolated from ci,·ilization . the campus. For that reason they should be good track men. It is said that .\1 and Rich get their wonderful speed in basketball by trying to get to an eight o'clock 111 three and thirteen-se,·enteenths minutes. Thev are broad-minded men. their ,·iew" being ,·cry comprehcnsi,·c. especially their ,·iews of the campu~ and of dates on Sixth street. which can be made more clear b) a pair oi glasses. Phi Gamma Deltas are firm belic,·er<; in the sur' i,·al oi the fittest and George ~Io rey ~Iiller.

Page 'l'wo lltnul!·!'d arHl Sixty


KAPPA SIGMA Kappa Sig:;, true epicurean in na t ure. do they hesitate to houses. .\ synonym

to tradition. custom, and themseh•cs are Yery They admit that they are of the aristocracy, nor take their place in school activities and sorority o£ Kappa Sigma is Jazz.

"Breathes there a man with soul so dead, \\'ho never to himself hath said, As he lay sleepless in his bed'Thc Kappa Sigma band be d-el.'" It is estimated that if th e discords occurrin g in one week were all played at the same time, the v ibrations would be disastrous eno ugh to wreck the entire Swiss Navy. As far as expenses go, it is rumored that it would be cheaper to run a "home" of your own than to live at the Kappa Sigma house.

BETA THETA PI .\s the Kappa Sigs are noted for their jazz, so the Betas ha,·e made a name for themselves as lovers of art, music, and the beautiful. In after years when we look back on our stay at the U. of I. we will think of the pleasant, balmy, spring e,·enings, just about twilight, when the silvery notes of a cornet duet were wafted by an evening breeze across the campus. .\lso famous singers and dancers arc to be found here. The Betas are probably nearer to the original Greek culture than any other organization on the campus. \Yhen looking at Gus with hi" discus and ja,·elin. or upon the graceful form and mo\ ements oi ''Jose phine," "'e are reminded of Greek art in its true form. It is said that the Betas arc as philosophical and scientific and as accomplished in literature a" thc old Greek masters. but no one has be<:n able to \'erify the stat<:mcnt.

SIGMA NU Sigma f\u has had a hard win ter-many casualties have been reported and many more anticipated. A visitor would have a hard time deciding· \\'hal the Sig-ma N u pin looks like, they arc so easily con fused with sorority pins. not in shape or design. but in numb<:r. The Kappa S igs will have to hand it to them when it comes to results. It is noticed that a Sigma f\ u is inclined to (be) 11 as tie. lT einz fi flysc,·en yarieties have nothing on Sigma Nu jewelry.

PHI DELTA THETA The most striking thing that eYer happened to me was the response receiYed from a fraternity when it was asked to do something. "Sure, we'll do it. what do you want us to do?" This willingnes!' to do thing;, puts the Phi Delts in a class by themseh·es. They not only do things but they do people as well, which accounts for so many lawyers in their midst. At present they are rather lost. but they will soon be next door to Delta Gamma again. it is hoped. They are firm believers in a liberal education. as exemplified by Ted Turner's poetry at yell rallies .

Page Two Hundred and Sixty-one


SIGMA A LPHA EPSILON The S .. \. E.'s arc a multifarious aggregation. . \ poor upper-classman was bewailing the fact that the iraternity wa:- being cOJwcrted into a boarding house. but on the other hand-we sec ,·arious youths enjoying harmless games of catch, and we hear melodious strains (almost to the breaking point) gushing from a well-i ntending piano in the front room . . \n S . .\. E. frosh holds the record for accumulation of photographs (excluding clippings from picture play magazines, in which Lindley Hall excels). The last count was discontinued on account of lack of funds, but it is estimated to be between three and four hundred. not to mention the ones he carries in his watches, watchcharms, and bill-books. Profs are prone to make the sign "()'' on their exam papers, mean ing that as a hole they arc just as happy as if they had good sense.

ELWETAS For cases of mumps none excel them. They arc also noted for other cases-the case containing the white owl. for example. They are more of a political organization than a social society. For keen business men, lawyers. newspaper men. and politicians they arc in a· class b\· themselYes. Their name "Elweta'' is one of the Greek letters that "~a borrowed by the Indians and nc,·er returnee!. Their eye for beauty is shown by the moYie actresses on the walls and e,·erything in general CYcrywhcre else.

KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA \\' hen a fellow gets put into office or falls heir to a fortune or -.omcthing. his first thought is "Can l swing a date with a Kappa?'' ,\ Kappa frosh is the height of any man's ambition, not to mention the upper classwomen. This accounts for the Phi Delts building across the road from them-jealous of the Betas! Like the Betas, they are lo,·crs of music. art. athletics. The star of the women's basketball league was a Kappa Frosb . They run the Thetas a close second when it comes to basebal l and other outdoor sports. Their position in society may be compared to that of the Kappa Sigma. but no one knows just l•ow. \\'c might mention in passing that the Juniors' most popular co cd is a Kappa.

DELTA GAMMA The only reason why the most popular Junior girl \\as a Kappa "as the fact that there were no D. G. Juniors to compete. You can always tell a D. G. by her smiling countenance and open face. They sing that Delta Gamma "takes the lead." and this has usually been found to be the case. D. G. toe dancers arc unexcelled by any on the Campus. Delta Gamma used to lead the women's organizations in scholarship. but library dates proYed detrimental to the studying of the newer sisters.

Pnge Two llund•·ed nnd Sixty-two


GAMMA PHI BET A (;antma l'hi~ are thought to be more quiet and sedate. Tht路y arc adherents to literature. home economic~ and indoor sport:-.. They don't ~eem to be a~ glad to meet you as a D. G .. but you never can tell. Still waters run deep-too deep for most of us (exception Gus. "Eas."' and Doc). .\ Gamma Phi holds the intramural record for dancing in a small area. She danced a little over two feet in an entire evening. They arc inclined to be sentimental as well as ornamental. 1\ date with a Gamma Phi gives the "thrill without words."'

KAPPA ALPHA THETA Thetas believe differently in regard to college education. They put studies first-as a result they arc the proud possessors of Mrs. LindIcy"s trophy cup. I nspirecl by S. A. E. athletes they may be seen on a balmy spring day gambling on the green, being engaged in a thrilling game of baseball. Another example of their activity is the large garden they keep up: also their house was placed a large distance from the street so that the sisters might get more exercise mowing and raking the lawn. If you want an educational strolling date call on the Theta house.

OMEGA PHI ALPHA Omega Phi promises to make the others sit up and take notice. They arc a jolly crew and a li\路ely one. .\s } et they have been too busy getting started on their Grecian career to enter school politics ancl to join in the mad rush for dates. HO\\'e\路er, when the college men find the opportunities they haYe to offer-large front porch shaded by two huge fir trees. etc.. there will be much rushing. llashcrs better get in your applications early. Several fellows have already found that certain Omega Phis are much to be sought for.

ALPHA DELTA A lpha Delta shou ld not be confused w ith Phi Alph<t Delta. T he similarity exists in nomenclature only. It is rumored that Alpha Delta is going to form a Theological society. Their ambition at present is a home of their own ( colJectively speaking. of course). \ Vhcn successful in this, they are to reform the society activities of the campus, they being strong ad,路ocates of strolJs along the ~. P. railroad tracks and hikes to ~[oscow mountain.

PRge Two Hundre(! an<! Sixty-three


-~-----~ 1 路r~o.N<路

X

Page Two Hunda路ed and Sixty-fotu路


BELLES Sec the gay a nd laugh ing belles, Ballroom belles. \Yhat a world of merriment their winking eye foretells. How they nc~tle. nestle. nestle, \\'hen the dance is at its height. \Yhile you valiantly wrestle \\'ith the crowd on either side! Keeping time. time. time. \\'ith a madness half sublime, To the rich intoxication that \'Oiumitwusly wells From the belle~. belles. belles. From the swinging and the clinging of the belles. See the coy and ba~hful belles, Parlor belles. \\'hat an evening of delight their little squeeze foretells, How their eyes begin to glisten, .-\ncl they meek\~ "it and listen To the tales of conquest won Ofostly lies) That vou swear that you have clone. \\'hile' you promi"c that they'll witne"s kingdoms won Before their eyes. Then a little hand it slides Up your arm and then resides O n your shoulcl<>r-how it glides Through the darkness and confides Of the raptun路 that impels To the huddling and the cuddling of the belles. Oi the belles. hl'lle-.. belles. Oi the crooning ancl the spooning oi the belles. -Punch Dowl.

Chemists' Ten Commandments 1. Thou ~halt ha ,路e no recreation but chem lab. 2. Thou shalt not make alcohol and drink it. 3. Thou ~ha lt not study chemistry in vain. for the final exams approacheth. 4-. Remember the chcm lab. and keep it smoky. six days shall yc labor. 5. Honor th~ l'roic,.,,or and thy Instructor that thy stay in the chem dept. may be long and profitable. 6. Thou shalt not kill thy neighbor with ium6 and poisonous gases but ye shall seck the hood immediately. 7. Thou shal t not commit adulteration oi the reagents or of thy determinations, ere great disaster fall upon you. 8. Thou shalt not steal thy neighbo r's test tube nor his beaker. 9. Thou shalt not hear false w itness against thy neighbor saying "these are his solutions which fume voluminously." 10. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's loan slips nor his reagents, for he did procure both at great expense of labor.

Page Two Hundred and Slxty-fh路e


Final Battle of the Sopho-F reshman War The The The The

shade,:; oi night were falling fast, rain came down like rain. soph'more gather close-agha::-tFrosh come on amain.

C:-\STO F'rcshmen to right of them, Freshmen to left of them. Freshmen in front of them Ran up and hollered. noldly they cursed like h--. Fought bravely. fierce. and well. ).Jany a hero fell, ~~any were collared.

C:-\0-'TO II Right awful was the battle scene, And many a back yard garden \Yas stripped of every pea and bean, .\11 ruined and down-trodden.

C.\:\TO III Sophomores in front of them. Sophs on both sides of them. Freshmen behind them all Running like thunder. Sophs were gaining hope. Thought they \Yere safe. but nope Right through the fence they broke, Lord! what a blunder!

CA):TO I\r The scene is changed to Fourth street, The humbled Sophs are led By strange uncouth, dishevelled men \Vith spirit far from dead. :\ow the trough is filled with water. Filled with cold and icy water. Filled with "路et and runny water. Filled to welcome those bra,路e warriors \\'ho had gi,路en up the battle. (;i,路en up because they had to! -:\ow the Juniors and the :eniors Cather round to see the spla::-hing-. Splashing as the mighty ocean:. Rocked and splashed by falling mountains. Then with dripping countenances . .\nd with dampened clothes and spirit Do these warriors hasten homeward.

Page Two Hundred and Sh.ty-slx


\\'bile with shouts of fun and laughter Do the upper classmen chide them. "I low arc the mighty fallen." CA~TO

\'

Thu:- cndeth the tale of a winter night \\"hen the wind and the rain heat hard. And the Frosh and Sophomores had a fight ~-\nd many a face was marred.

The Chemist's Explanation By the laws of mass action. the mixture broug-ht on a \'iolent reaction. The concentration of the Sophs on one side and the Frosh on the other was a constant source of agitation. Finally a struggle was precipitated ·with a large e\·olution of heat and gases. The reaction \\·as somewhat rever!'\ihle. going both ways with great speed according to the equation SoJ>h=FRoSh. There being an excess of Frosh. the reaction was pushed to Fourth street and the Sophs were put into solution-being a saturated bunch not nearly as radical as before. Th<' formosive Frosh were characterized by their co-efficient of rigidity and their cohesion, their motto being ''For Gosh sake, hang together." The reaction was accelerated by darkness and rain. ~

Playing the Game lle starts out with the usual scrimmage with the scrub. After he feels that he is sufficiently clean. he calls his !like and is put on his way to her house. ~0\\ she must know her game. Her best play is her full-back. and putting on her new gown, she determines to give him the full benefit of it. .-\s he a<h·ances up the field and his footsteps echo on the front porch. she awaits for the signal. :\ faint tinkle of the bell is heard and she rushes downstairs and lets him in. He has an open field. but then so has she. Remembering what the coach, her fond mamma. who has played the game for herself told her. she draws him off-side. .\fter a certain amount of preliminary play. he takes a line plunge. and it is some merry line that he can han<! out. The game progresses. The lights go out. but this is one game that i::.n't called on account of darkness. He starts holding. She takes the tackle. but attempts a -;hift. .\ttempt unsuccessful. she fumbl es with a forward pass. he passionately place5 his objectiYe to its goal. lie scores a touchdown that is long and lasting. The Belle is heard. "This is so sudden." she gushes. ·'Again!" The Belle gets a ring-. The game seems ended. but list. The Key turns in the lock and father enters. Our hero prepares for the kickoff, but here she pulls an intercepted play. so father shakes his hand and congratulates him on his success. Later she in turn is congratulated by the coach for her excellent playing. The score is I to 1. They both 'nn. -Ex.

PaJ.:e Two Hundred and Slxt)·-seven


Prof. Bangs One day as Saint Peter was guarding the gate That lead s to the heavenly land. Prof. Dangs, in hopes of aYoiding his fate i\lost humbly suggested a plan That promised most urely to great!} inspire The songs of the golden shore. By forming on high an infinite choir Of a few thousand Yoices or more. Said he to Saint Peter. ":\ly plan. sir. is this- " And he smiled in his pleasant way. "To ha,·e ten thousand altos and ten thousand bass. Ten thousand sopranos. we'll say.'' But here of a sudden he halted in terror. Saint Peter had said \\'ith a :-tart." In this wonderful choir. ,,·ho on earth will sing tenor?" Said Bang:-. "I'll carry that part."

F .\STEST CROWD

0~

TilE C \:\!PCS

The Glee Club \\'ere ha,·ing their picture:- taken at Sterner's. .\£ter the first pose. Sterner said: "Do you want them taken all smiling?" ·'>Jo,'' said Bangs, "\\'e aren't adYertising tooth paste.'' "Feature a half page cut in a magazine. 'LJ. of 1. Glee Club all use Pepsodent,' said Veatch. "I can't tell a lie," sa id Sutherland. '· f use Rexall." "I can't tell a lie, either," Kimmel spoke up. "I use Colgate's.'' Knudson coughed-'' I cannot tell a lie I use my roommate's!''

Page Two Hundred and Sixty-eight


Advertisements

l'a~ot•• 'T'wo l luncll'l'cl ""d Hlxly-nlne


Where All Idaho Meets

Under this Tower of the Un iversity of Idaho, every day in the college year, students from all m·er the state meet in their pursuit of learning. They are preparing fo r A G R J C t; LTC R E

B t.; S I :\ E S S

E :\ G l :\ E E R I:\ G F 0 R EST RY

LA\\. ~I

I :\

T :\

TE:-\C II I:\(; Tllf!.

The

TCIT/0.\"

University ~rOSCO\\'

Page Two Hundre<l and

IS

Heq•nt~

PRE£

of

·· 11) .\110

Idaho

G


The Togs Clothes Shop

Hart Schaffner

&Marx Clothes

M erchandise of ~uality Every .\rticle we sell is (~tl arantecd To (~i\路 e Satisfaction or .\Ioney llack

THE TOGS Moscow's On{'' Shop _for Men ($J Y ou"g Men


BRATTON'S f QlJA LITY SERYICE PRICE

I

<; I{OCERIE

I:\

t I

T

I I

i

Phone 18() and 330

·-·-·-····-·-·-·-..·•..... .................. ..................._•..:.

·:.....

Bolding

'"lsn"t he rather fast, dear?" asked the anxio us mother. ··Yes. mama, but I don't th in k he w ill g-et away.'"-Ex.

J

un ior-~ay. weigh~ fast. Fro~h- Yes.

I

+

but

K o~ty

~ure

he weigh . . a lot. too.

!

J ewelry Store

i

In E nglish Class Prof.- \ \ ' hy should • Irvingquoted? Gladys C.-Ob,·ious reasons.

l

.JT JIOSC0 /1' ~Jail

f

i

•'~ f~ f~

Built

Send L:s Your

f I

The Students of Idaho

The Colonel of a llritish Regiment r eached ho m e in a very angry mood, a nd when questioned by his wife as to the cause, repl ied: "\\'hy, that Yankee Captain att ached to us boasted in the mess today that he had kissed e'·ery officer.".~ wife in the regiment but one. '"~ly word."" replied his wife. ··t wo nder who she can be !''- Ex.

.!.

Orders

····

be

·:·····•·····•···•··•··•··•··· . ···•··•···-···•···-···· ...···•··•··•..·•······•··•··•··· ... ..·········•···············-···•·•-•··•··•··•···-···•··· ...···•··•··•··•··•··•··· . ···•··:·

G.o.o.n.s

A·T · H·L·E·T·l·C Fishin g T ac kl e Outin g

Gun s a nd Ammunition C l ot h i n g, Etc .

EQL'IP.i\TEXT FOR COLI.EGE, SC H OOL .\XD CLL- 11

TE . \~f~

DISTRIBUTORS Wright & Ditson

Goldsmith

HIGHEST Q UALITY ATHLETIC GOODS

Hoxsey-Lambert Company SPORTING

GO O D S

Spokane ,

Pa .::e Two H u n <ln.•<l and

~l·H· nt y-two

EXCLUSIVELY

Washington


The HAPPIEST HOME in the World

DRS. HOSIER & SWANSTROM

J, tho.: hnnw that givo.:' o.:xt>ro.:,~ion to happithrou~h music. Have you do.:nicd \Oursd£ and familv this kind of a home. j,,•Jit'\·in~ you coul<i not afford it. or ha,·e you faikd to l(iH· thl· matto.:r tht' >oerious thou~ht ) 011 ,Ju uld?

111:''

lli~h-grado.: Ill'\\ Playo.:r Pianos, well known 'tandard mak,·s. prico.:d as hm as ------ ----------$4~5.00 LTsed Playa Pianos, standard makes, as J,>w as --- _ --- --- ----------$325.00 :\ew high l(radt L:pright Pianos. "" low as ---- -----------------$325.00 Standard Upright used Pianos as low as --- -- _ -----------------$150.00

\II in't runH'11ls fully gua ranteccl. Rca'nnahk tams. \\'rit e for fu ll particulars.

CO~ST1Tl'TIO~.\L \~IE:\ D~l E:\'l' 0 I' E R.\T I 0:\ S.

Excitl·mcnt ( .uaranh:ecl. Frosh--

·=·····•··•··•···..·-·..................,.........................................;.

COLLINS & ORLAND HARDWARE CO.

\\\· abo carry a compll•te line of small ami Band Inst rum,•nt,, Classical and Popular Slll·ct .\lusic Send in \'OUr order and o;anll' "ill h,· given promt)t attention.

EILERS

MUSIC

General Hardware

HOUSE

il9 Spraguo.: Spokano.:. \\'ashington

ID.\EIO

CATEUPIL~ RfG.U.S. PAT.OFF.

THE HOLT MANUFACTURING COMPANY SPOK.\:::\E. \\'.ASIII~GTO~


Lew·iston Produce Co.

First N ational Bank

LEWISTON, IDAHO Shippers of

Fancy Fruits and \·egetables . tra wberries, Apples, Pears. Peaches and .\pricots In Car Lots or E.t'jlri'SS Shipments.

STUDENT

12~ ~fain

Street Phone 762 LE\VlSTO:-\. 1 DATTO

ACCOU NT S

·=·······..•··•..•··•. .···•··•··•··•···..·-·····........ ...........................:.

W ELCOME

"H u rry,' ' said t he excit ed lady, bt·eat hlessly. "G ive me a mouse trap quick-1 want to catch a train."

MOSCOW

IDAHO

1 used to think 1 knew I knew But now 1 must confess The more I know I know I know I know I know the I ess .

.:··-·-.-·-·-·..·---·-·-·.......·- ·-.-........,._._,._.,_._. _._.__.._._....._... ......._._._._....._.. ....... ......... . -................._._·-·----:.

ENSIGN & ENSIGN Insurance and

Surety Bonds BOISE

Page Two llunclrt>tl nn<l se,·<'nly-four


IT'S A FACT Princess Products Are the Best VOLLMER CLEARWATER CO. Lewiston, Idaho Seattle Yakima. Spokane P ortland Me rch ant Millers and Dealers in

and

.:.............. .·-·-·-·-·-·-·.......

~Ir. J. P.-My boy, what do you expect to be when you get out of college? A. J. P.-An old man, father!

'' Let's k iss and make up." "If you are careful I won't have to."

Made by

llay

''Kissing Betty"But you have to know Betty to appreciate this kind of poetry!!

that

Grain,

A P oem in Two W ords

Beans

That

Solomon had a t housand wives :1'\owadays is just plain knowledge. But think of the number he might ha,•e had If he had but gone through college .

........,_.. ._.,_._......_......................................-._................................-.................._.............:..

-.__._

When you have your House Wired this Spring DON'T FORGET: The little switch with buzzer at the head of your cellar stairs and at the foot of the attic stairs. The switches which enable you to turn on the upstairs or downstairs ha ll lights from either floor. The useful lights on front and back porch which add distinction to your home, prO\'idc convenience for the caller and furnish protection for your family by night. The easily reached pull sockets for indi\'idual control of lightseasy to find in the dark. The proper number of baseboard receptacles in c,·ery room in order that you may u:>e the many inexpensi,·e electrical com·eniences that make entertaining easier and housekeeping a pleasure . .\sk us for figures on \\'iring your home-.\n inquiry places you under no obligation.

The Washington Water Power Company Page Two Hundred and Seventy-lh·e


ORllAN'

P age Two Hundred and Se,路enty-,.lx


·~T

Oberg Brothers Company .I I General ..I Merchandise

For Quality and Service

I I

I

T

Us

'fry

I I I

Empire Bakery I Third Street T I

MEN'S, YOUNG MEN'S AND

t

BOYS' CLOTHING

I

····-·-·-..................._...........................................

·:.....

~

J. I. Case Threshing Machinery and

Fairbanks Morse Co. Gas Engines EMPIRE HARDWARE H. Kalinowski, Prop. Shelf and Gen eral Hardware

l' i t

.t

I f

MEN' S AND CHILDREN'S SHOES

In our Tailoring Department we make Men's and Ladies' Suits to order.

All Work Guaranteed

Cor. Third and Washington Streets Moscow, Idaho

I

.:............................_....................._.............._.......... ..+

LATEST STYLES Engraved and Printed Wedding Stationery and Cards

t

I. I

t

f

fT

. T T I

t

I!

.It .tt .I I

Fine Lefler SlalionerlJ

Ed-This controls the brake. It's put on very quickly in case of emergency. Co-eci- Oh ! Something like a kimono.

T

;

~ZJ ~

.:....................................................................................~

"I hear Christina is to be married." "\i\Tho's the lucky man?" "Her father."

I I

I

!

Sigma Nu- vVhat do you say we get married? Kappa- \i\Thy, who'd have us?

I

T T

~ ~ ZJ

I

i

STRAWN & COMPANY Printers 822 Idaho Street

I

! T !

.! T I

Boise, Idaho

+

She .frowned on him and called him Mr. Just because in fun he Kr. So out of spite The following night The naughty Mr. Kr. Sr.

Page Two Hundred and Seventy-seven


DAVIDS' " The Students' Store"

For twenty4ive years closely identified with every College activity, and known all over the State as the Store that Meets Every Demand of the College Cfrade

.:.......................................................................................................................................................................................:.

Finishers to 1922 Gem of the Mountains

.i路. f r

f

!

i

Sweet li ttle Em ily Rose \\'as t ired and sought repose, Bu t her brother named Cla ir, P ut a tack in her ha irSw eet little E mily R ose.

~

t

i

Send us your Kodak Work by Mail \\'e pay ret urn

po~ t ag-e.

I

\Yoman'!'> hair, beautiful hair! \\'hat words of praise I utter; But, oh! how s ick it ma kes me feel T o find it in th e butter.

! t

I r

! ! I

Dean Little-How :-.\\'ear before me?

dare

you

\ "eatch- l low did I wan t ed to swear first?

kno w you

~

i

t

HOD G I NS' If " The Kodak Store" .!. Page Two Hundred and Se,路enty-eh;ht

Perrine (fi rst nigh t oi foot ball pract ice)-l 'm so sore that I can' t tell w he th er I am s t a nding or sitti ng . K elly- If you're telli ng the truth, you're ly ing.


Space-Did you hear about the great \'ictor} of the Tur~s? Curtis-~o. \\hat \\ClS it? Space-The~ heat a retreat.

Moscow has the Best Laundry and Dry Cleaning Plant

II ydc-11 o\\ is the '' orld treating you? Ostrander (absent mindedly)( >h. about as often as 1 could expect it.

in the Northwest

·=···................. ............................................. ...... .........:. \\' 111~0:

"W e clean Everything--- ,~.~ Your ~tiracter excepted"

YOL'

SO).fETIIl~G

.\ :Jl)

WANT

ORlGINAL

,\ RTISTIC j

II

F I o 1v c r . I r r a 11 g c 111 c 11 t s Send Your Onkrs to

C. B. GREEN

THE SPOKANE FLORIST CO.

Proprietor

(1-:IPP'S FLO\\ J' R S'l ORE)

Phone :\Jain 5

513 Ri,·erside

•...-.-.-.-.--.-.·-·-·--·-.-·.-.-.......-.............. .. .-·-·-··..........._._._...:.

. :_.....-.-··-·;··-·-......... ...............·-·-·-·-·_._,._._ ,...._

.

The Perfect Gift for the Memory Book Your PHOTOGRAPH ..

Sterner's Studio 521 South Main Phone Main 19-L Moscow, Idaho

Page Two lfun<lred an(l Seventy-nine


THE

. For the Best

Home Made Candies and

Ice Cream

T ·ELEPHONE

Functions only in providing a means whereby one subscriber may converse with another through intelligent use and proper. operation of the utility. By the very nature of the business, telephone service in any community can be satisfactory only tp the ,degree that users co-operate in the proper use and with due regard to the r egulations prescribed.

Moscow Telephone & Telegraph Co. Limited

.:....................................................................................+

e

....,

DOOLEY'S

l.:::.i

F a ncy Hand fainted China

MITTEN'S Excellent Fountain Service

Glassware Crockery : : Notions

125 E. Third St. 1\fOSCO\\". IDAHO

·-····..·-·-·-·..•··..·•··•··•··•··...--....-.............._........ ...:--

·:..

SHAKESP:E;AREAN, ANCIENT, PAGEANT, ORIENTAL AND MODERN COSTUMES

Assorted :\Iasquerade Costumes " "igs and

"~Take-up" ~Iaterial s

for Rent or Sale

Rem ember, we arc your home costum ers, always ready to please you.

WE MAKE GOOD

MILLER-DERV ANT PIONEER COSTUMERS 209-211 N. Post St.

Auditorium Bldg.

Spokane, VI! ashington

Page Two Hundred and Eighty

·:. . . ... .......-................. .............-····-····-'!. .. ..............;. " 1-:la ,.e you swept under the carpet?" "'l es. mum: I always sweep everything under the carpet.'"

Subscriber-Please send me your paper for a week back. Editor-You had bettet· try a porous plaster. Doc. Scott-I clidn"t think the doctor would send me a bill! Les.-\Vhy? D oc.-He said he was treating me. Prof. Brown-This is actually the worst recitation I have heard for a long time. I have done most of it myself. \Vhatever trouble Adam had, No man could make him· sore By saying when he told a joke: "Gee, I"ve hea,-d that before."


She sat on the bench read ing her Catechism. She had a little gray cat beside her.

PIIO~OGRAPII

£>1. .\Y ER

RECORDS ROLLS

PlA~OS

Ness Music H ouse

Our hero leaned m·er t he back of the bench and kissed one of t hem .

Thr mtlsl ct1111plrlr stock of I ~STRUME~TS a11d .\IUS ICAL ~IERCHAXDISE Sltmdttrd 1111d Papula1· .\Jusic R23 .\l ain Sl., Opp. Idanha Pharmacy Phont· 200 Lcwi~ton, Idaho

\\'e didn't see, but we wonder : \\' ag it the Catech ist ?-Punch now!.

·:_.......................................-.........................................:.

li e- Do you care if [ smoke? She- 1 don't care if you burn. -Octopus.

C. E. WITTER CO. PLUl\fB I :\G

The Last Word is Grounds

I I EAT ! :\G TI 1 NI :\G

.\ baby weighed four hundred lbs.; This isn't as queer as it sbs. This solid young one \\'as an elephant's son .\t the zoolog-ical grhs.

\\'ELDI~G

412

~lai n

St.

)fain 230

• : - - - - · - - - - -. .- - . . _............ .. ._.. . ...

I

I

I

I

. .... _................,_._.. . .. . .,._._._...................,._.... . .,._............:,.

Mason, Ehrman & Co. Lewiston and Moscow - DISTRIBUTORS RED RIBBON AND SUNKIST CANNED GOODS WEDDING BREAKFAST SYRUPS CERTAIN-TEED PRODUCTS HOEFLER'S CHOCOLATES GATEWAY AND OLD FAITHFUL FLOUR AND CEREALS THE NATION'S FINEST CIGARSFLOR DE MOSS CARABANA

DRY CLIMATE

Page Two Huntll·ed ancl Eighty-one


Little drops of water Frozen on the walk ~lake the naughty adjecti,·es ~I ix in people'-. talk.

Dutton's H,and Made Candies News and Tobaccos

Stuclc- 1 n:all) don't think I descn·e a zero!

Dr. \ 'nn Ende

\\' ell. you know that is the lowest grade we give.

·=··•··•··•···. •··•. ..... ..... ..............,.•..•..•..•......................:.. ~

.' ' 1

R ollefson 's· Cash Grocery

Jerry's

QL' ICK S.\LES PROFITS

S~L\LL

QC.\ LIT\' \ L\\ .\ Y~

T hird at Main

Let l's Supply Your \\ants \. T. ROLLEFSOX. Prt)p.

Ice Cream

Home Madeand Pure

Pies, Cakes and Candy \\'e use on ly the choicest and purest of materials obtainable m all our products. Our icc cream is made from Pure Sweet Cream, Eggs and Sugar - it costs more, of course, but is so much better than the cheap substitute Tee Cream.

The Bon Ton \YOOD & IT A~[ER You will notice that the most of the pictures in this book \\Cre made in our big Photo Shop

Page Two Hundred and Eighty-two


I'a"e Two llundr路ed and Eighty-three


COLLEGE AND HOME One the preparation for the other. To make t he home beautiful requ ires the right materials. T here is a J & D fini sh fo r every purpose. . \ s k fo r thi brand. Jones & Dillingham Co., Lewiston. Idaho E,·erything in the Paint. Glass. Windo w, Door and \\'all Paper Lines

Kosty-\\'hy are you late? Ca rl N.-Class began before I got here.

··You drive awfully fast, don't you?'' " I hit seventy yesterday." ··were any of them killed ?''

.:..... ...... ...... ..... ....·-····-····......................................_•..:.

For Brainy People Only

High Grade

( Read backwards) Do fools all, it do would you knew we.

,

MILLINERY At Po pular Prices

T orsen Millinery

" \\'hy does a ~ cotchman wear kilts?" ··r don't know why?" .. Because he would ~.: t arrestc I if he didn't."

.:.... ....._•......._._.,_._._._._•..._. . _____._•...,...__._. . . . . _._................,.._._._...................................--.·-............r Springtime means Squirrel Shooting \\ tth the first warm days come ground squirrels. It's good sport to sit on a sunny knoll matchin g you r s kill against their cunning.

Special Offer Form a squ irrel shooting club. Order two or more 12C Remington Rifles, costing $31.95 each. \\'ith each rifle sent we will give grati s 500 cartridges, either short. long, long rifle or Remington Special. State which cartridge you prefer when ordering.

WARE BROTHERS CO. 125 H oward St.

Page Two l lund red and Elghty-rour

SPOKANE, WASHINGTON

609 Main Ave.


Cit y Tran s fer Dra y & Stor a g e C o .

College Girls

Students' Trade Solicited

R egard this Shop as Fashion Headquarters, for here they find the

Office at }.fasonic Temple ::\Joscow

really new things long before they

CARL Sf-liTH, Proprietor Office Phone 11 Res. Phone 11-H

become "popular".

+·•···..···•··•··•···..···•··•"•··•···..······•··•··•··•··•··•··•···..•··•..•··.•

St a nd a rd Lumb e r Co.

T he Fashion Shop

COAL · (I

lid

L UMBER ::\lOSCOW

..

JD.\ HO

Moscow

..................................................................................:.

~

E rb H ardware Company Lewiston, I daho WHOLESALE AND RETA I L HARDWARE An acre and a half floor space under one roof Jf! C

Call

SCI''t'C ,\'011 "t,•c/1 ill

S E T?. VICE Q[.'AL.TTJ'

!'RICE

·=···•··•··•··•··•··•··•··•..•··•··•··•··•-•··•··•··•··•..•··•··•..•···-···•·····:·

SAY,

FOLKS

" 'hen you ar e in Lewiston Yisit the

METRONO ME

Dancing A cade m y Assembly Dances every Thursday and Saturday.

Good :\Iusic

Perfect Floor

MANN BROS. & K E LSE Y, Managers.

·=·····•··•··•···..·-······•···•··•··•··•··•···•··•"•··•···•··•···. ..................:. A kid got onto a weig hing machine, F rom his eye g leamed a Yillainous ray; l le put a lead penny into the slot .\nd s ilently stole a weigh .

"It's plane that I loYe you," he began. "Is that on the Jeye) ?" she asked. " Haven't I always been on the square with ):Ott?" "But you ha,·e many vices," s he remonstrated. '' :\ ot a bit of it," he replied. " \Yhat made you brace up ?" "The fact that T saw you," he answered. "I ought to hammer you for that," s he said saucily . "Come and sit on the bench," he urged. .l "Suppose the others should file in?" "You shouldn't let your arms compass me- - " "I know a preacher who is a joiner," he suggested.

Page Two ·Hundred and Eighty-live


Tlrr ;,•cry to good uppcararrcc and /o;,•

prias:

Clothe, that meN the most exacting qual ity tests 1·irgin wool fabrics, the most durahlc weave,~. patterns of uncommon designs and color tones. and tailo ring that as.,nrc' long sen·ict·. - and tlu.• ! louse of Kuppenheimcr has co-op<::trtcd with us in the effort to restore the old )>rices on clothing of genuine merit- to hdp yo tt buy clothing o f quality at low )>rices. You can come in now and see some of the advance spring models. You'll like tlwm. wt• are sure.

Clnlc R.- lh· the waY. are ,·ou g<>ing to tak~ (!inner an;·where- tomorrow e\'etting? ~1. C. (eagcrlyJ - \\' hy. no; not that I know of. Clydc- ~l y! \\'on't you he hungry the next morning?

·=··· -···············•··•··•··•··•··•···..····-···•··•··•··•··•···...····-······:·

Frantz H ardware Co. s,,.,·,·ssor.r

.)'peered t•aluc·s-pricrs tlrat ,,.,, bused 011 /o;,•a costs:

$40

didn't (;od make

\'crna-~l<t\hC lie ha!l. only you ha ,·cn't foutHf him yet.

Kuppenheimer Good Clothes

$3 5

~lerccd~s- \\ ' hy

me a man?

MOSCOW

to

HARDWARE CO.

$45

Straus & Glauber Twin Fall"

iluhl

E' ~rything in the Line of 11.\R D\\ .. \ R I~ and (;ROCERI£5

. ._,___.-................._..._...,._...._____.....----·--·-....-·-..·---·----·-·--·-.-.------·-------:·

.:. .....

,

T he Moscow Store where you get the Better Kinds of Wearing Apparel for Men a nd Women.

Page Two llunch·ecl ancl

t<;i~hty-six


Samm's Furniture Store

· -A

N A TI O N

Opcrotiug Stores-312

312-Bu~y

FURNISHINGS FRO?.l .\ TO Z

z

.\!ways Something Xcw in PERIOD FURXITURE

0 1-

See Samm's Before You Buy

II-

Corner First and :\lain

.:.................... ...._...•_._____·-·-·-·-···....····-····..···•··•··=· REAL EST,\ TE FIDELITY BO~DS REXT:\LS

Veatch R ealty Company Limited

INSTITUTION-

] . C. Penney Co.

Complete Line of

HOUSE

WIDE

U . of I . STUDENTS

Ul

E conomize on Your Expenses While in College. Do it the J. C. Penney way.

UJ

Let us mutually co-operate with you while going through College

::>

z 0

••

~

z

0 1<(

0/1

)>

z

)> ~

0

z ~

0

..

l\1Ei'\'S FURNISHINGS l\1 E:-\'S STOCK SUITS ?.IE:'\'S ?.lADE-TO-I::\TDJV ID-

l'.\L-:\IEASURE SUITS FUR::\TISHI~GS

z

L.\ Dl ES'

<(

L.\DTES' READY-TO-WE.\R G.\R:\IEXTS

m

z

(/)

~ ~

c

~

0

z

Shoes a Specialty

IXSCR.\XCE in the Oldest, Largest and Re;,t Companie> in the world

l\IOSCOW :: TDAIIO

·-·-·-....·-·-····-....·-·. .............. ............. ...:.

·:...............

Roth l.adic;,' and :\len's. Serve. You

Let Us

l f It's Xew-Wc Have It -A

NATION

WIDE

INSTITUTION-

·=···...................... -.................... _................... _............:.

From a Co-ed's Note Book

LIBERT Y Th eatre H om e

of

the

S tude n ts

If he kisses vou on the forehead it show<; he admires your brains. If he kisses you on the check, il sho\\'s he is not afraid of lead poisoning. lf he kisses you on the ch in it shows an app reciation of something- better. Tf he kisses you on the lips, it sho\\'s good- taste. lf he kisses you on the nose. it shows he needs practice.

Cady- . \rc you fond of math? Bills- Yes, 1 get stuck on e\'en· problem.

Paramount ARTCRAFT

PICT U R E S

Tom Did your \\'atch stop when you dropped it on the Aoor? Dick-Sure thing: did you think it would g-o through?


rn~e

Two ll lln<ll'e<l ant!

l~i"hty-eighl


You ought to li~tcn to Chenoweth when he i~ R;l\ en about l'oc.

MOSCOW BARBER SHOP .\

P \RTilTL.\R SJ lOP

FOR P.\RTitTI. \R PEOPLE

One ~eldom lo >k>- at face~ _\,.. down the :-;trcct he peg~. For things han· changed their place:,; .\nd now he look:-; at- '-'hop " t i l dow:-;. I I e ~aid her teeth "ere like the

1\EST SERVICE

~tar:-;,

\\'hich similt "as righ t; l le didn't know that like the star~. 1Ier teeth came nul at night!

n. I hardly e\·er g-et to in the lihran anr more. Teacher \\'ell. ·why· not. l~,·c In1 ? ,..,_ "\Ill · E. B. - Oh, >-omctimc:-; and ,;om ct i 111 c:-;- .. Heed- Y cs. it's (.•itl1er Jim. or llarr~. d r (;eorge. I~Yclyn

~tudv

C.

L.

J . \1~.

Prop .

_

.:. ......-..... ................·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·--·-----....-- .......___._._...._.. . ..............-............................__._..... .-...-·-··.:.

Why Art in Dress? The difference between a kitchen chair and a l'hi.>pendale chair

1:-;

a mattn not of materials but of .\rt. ( )ur cloth in g- is ,;elected and so ld with a:1 idea of .\rt

good taste,

if yo u wi ll. Tho~c who take ach·antage of our sen·ice arc u,;uall: \\ell dre~~cd,

n.·fkrting taste and g ood breeding in matter:-; of <Ires>-.

R. J. HURD & CO. Spokan e

GOOD

CLOTHES

FOR

MEN

Pa"l· 'l'wo IIIIIHin; d an<l l•:if(hty-nlne


"Do Your :.hoe~ fit?" .. ~o. ·they give me 'em ... .. \\' hat. the :.hoes?" "~ o : fits." " .\h." he cried. a:. he picked up an egg from the piano stool. "The La,· of the Last ~linstrcl !'-Ex. · ~ouse (producing roll )-"\\' hat ( hie) can I get for this?" Teller "Four JH.' r cent. Souse (handing m ·er roll ) "Good. I 'll take the whole " ·orks ... - l~x.

" I hear prohibition hit J im so ha rd he killed h imself." ''Suicide?'' .. ~ o. II erpicide ... lie stood on the hanks o f the leaping brook. II is senses nearly reeling. .\nd no\\ and again he would Yenturc a lookThe ,·illagc ncltes were peeling.

PRID E AND PROFIT .\ Druggist "ho take:- pride in hi::profession will always con s ider quality before profit. Profe ssional pride cause:-. u..; to s tand hack of e,· er~ article sold O\'Cr our counters and to refund the price of anything which proves unsatisfactory. ~lay we have your drug trade under these conditions ?

Corner Drug & J ewelry Store \\' hen.· Qual it~ Count:-

C.

E.

BOLL E S , Pr o p .

S pok<lll<''s

.I

S tor.· for l' ort crrrtl l'our Pel/en,• Strtdc·uls. too .

C<1sll .'>' torr for all tlrt' P c-'lplc

FRO M MOSCOW T O

THE P A L ACE The money you will save on wearing a pparel will more t ha n pay you for t he trip. 110\\' DO YOL' LlKE THESE PRICES:

Felt llats. latest stdes _________________ :___________ S 3.50 . . ~e" Spring Dress hirts------------- --- - --- ------------ S IA8 I landso me new .\11 \\'ool Suit:::- late:-.t of late SJS.OO :-.pring models ----------- ---------------W E SELL FOR CASH AND FOR L E SS. ~ew

IF YOU TRADE HERE-YOU WILL SAVE HERE.


Campus T ogs

BANKING

CLO T H E S i-. our business and in retum ior your patronag-e we offer you l'\'Cry safety and sen·ice known to g-ood modern banking

.Ill tlwt tlr,• ''""" /mplr<'S

TilEY .\RE CORRECT CLOT liES FOR COLLEGE ~IE\' For Salt• in Spokane h)

Fogelquist Clothing Co.

OFFICERS: llawkin ~ll'lg-t~rd. Pro:,idt•nt :\ 1. E. l.e\\'i,, Vice President .\. ~ldgar<l, Vice- President \\'. E. Cahill. Ca,hier \'\'. 1(. Armour. ,\s,\. Cashier ~1. L. Chut•ss . . \s,t. Cashit•r

First Trust & Savings Bank l.ary.-st and StronyNI lltmk iu l.trlalr C01mty

·=-·--·-·--._..... . .. ._._...._._._,._............._........._:·

The

K enworthy

Rin~r,idc

and \\'a,hing-ton

S POK \ \' E

·=·····•··•··•··•···-·-····. ........... .. ...................................:. to Jacobson's only objection walking home with a girl after dark is the arc light.

First Flca- lla\'c you been on a \'acation? Second Flea-.\' o. been on a tramp.

. ,. _--·--------.-..·:·

·:...-.-....-----,._._- ...

Students' Headquarters DRUGS ST .\ T l 0 .\' I\ R Y

MOSCOW ' S LEADING THEATRE

.\ Playhouse of Refinement where the students 111

a

~

s p c n d 't h e i r hours

Ie i s u re

I C I~

C R E. \ M aud

l' 0 .\' FE C T I 0 .\' E R Y

Economical Pharmacy .\.

LI.\'DQL·l~T.

J•a~~

Prop.

·1'wo ltunch't> I ancl

~int-t~·-one


The

··Papa. what do you call a man who runs an auto? ..

Coeur d'Alene

.. It depends upon how near he comes to hitting me.''

(If

s />(I 1: (/ II I'.

IV II

s,

iII

!II() II

TilE HOTEL \\Tfl I .\ PE H ~O:\" .\LITY

H.\RRY F. GOETZ \ftllltlf/U

OL'R R.\TES .\RE LOWER Tl 1.\:\

TIIOSE OF \:\Y OTIJER FJRSTCL.\SS

HOTEL

T:\

SPOK \:\E

Glady:-;-( ;race say:. you re twofaced. Fred You believe me. don't you ? Gladys-\\'ell. I didn't think you would \\Car that one if you had another. ~I iss I ngersoll-1 s thi" noun neu ter. ~Ir. Kinney? .-\ 1.-Yes. quite neu ter-me.

.\-Some class. ch? B-\\'hat? .-\-'22.

•:••• ••• ••• ••• .. • ··• - • •·• ••• ooe••• ••• "• .. •·•·•- • •·• •·• ..,• ••• ••• ••• •·• •·• •·• ·•• ··• ··• •·• •·• ••• .,• ••• ••• ••• ,..• ••••·• •••eooe"e ••••• •·• •••• •--• ••• .. • ••• ••• ••••••••e••eooe•••••• ••eooe•••••!•

Your Photograph

- a gift money can't buy

JAJYIES EGGAN Photographer Moscow, Ida ho

Pa..:t- Two Hun<lred and "'inety-twu


SHERFEY'S BOOK STORE

0 Tire• Jlomt• of 1~.\STl\l.\:'\

KOD.\KS

(1/ld

\' I CTROL.\S

·:·····•···. .....................................................................:. ,

THE IDAHO BARBER SHOP 120 Third St. \\'e

IHI\

The other day In Lindlcv hall .\I iss Butler Said to the boys: \\'hen you spill Something on the Table \' ou should turn To the hostess .\nd say "Excuse me" . \nd then One of the boys Spill ed hi s prunes i\nd he said to The host css (a m <\11) .. Excuse me" .\nd the ll ostess Said ''Turn him up!" ,\pologics.

e e\·erything- in the yen·

latest and up to-date I lair Cutting.

Save your whiskers for ROWLAND, THE BARBER

"Don't YOU love these moonlight night,;?" · ":'\ot an\ more than any other nights." ·

Noftsger's Department Store . Moscow 's

Fastest

Growin g

Store

LADlES' COATS SUITS, DRESSES DRY GOODS

HATS

CAPS

\\'c carry

HOSIERY UNDERWEAR GROCERIES MEN'S FURNISHINGS TIES SHIRTS UNDERWEAR

J. & T. Cousins and Maxine Shoes ior \\'omen.

White House Shoes for .\len. \\'e carry in stock all the sizes and "idths .\.\.\ to C. Expert Shoe Fitters wait on you and we absolutely guarantee a fit. Our greatest desire is to sen· e you and sen·c you right. Always :\Ierchandise of Quality

Page 'l'wo llnnd•·ed an(\ Ninety-three


Prof. Cushman (in English l 11 a:- all\ one ,.,ecn Lincoln ~I itch ell? Is he it; school? Stude lie i:-. in school because he is in Spani:-h with me. Cushman-\\'ell. \'ou'd better tell him to come aroun~l or he'll be in ··Dutch·· with me.

TULL&GIBBS S p okane,

W as h .

HOO\T.ER

··1 hear they h;\\·e a trained nu rsc. ··Don't they like the wild ones?" "jones com mi tted morning." " \\' hat in he ll?" "\ 'cry pmbably ...

suicide

this

II c II m\ do you like your new gown? She-It doesn't quite come up to my anticipations. I le Yes. hut they are wearing them low this year.

$1.00 DOWN $1.00 WEEKLY PAYS FOR A HOOVER \\' ~: r~:comm ...IHI and guarani~:~: the .. lloo,.... r .. <b the 111o't dlicicnt. 'ati,factor). and , .. r._.,, cleaning dt.•' ict.• to '"t.' on yl!ur ntg' ancl caq>ct,.

W e Are H oover Headquarters Send for H oover Catalog

.:---·-·-·-·-,·-·-·-..-.--.--,·-.---..-·- -·--·--.-.._.-·-·---·-·-·-·-·-.-·-··-·-·-·--·--··-·....... . ...._._..._........:·

M USIC FLOWER S

Y ours for the Best Service .G{uality Counts

Page Two Hunth·ed nn<l Ninety-four·

A ND CONFEC TIO NS

Moscow, Idaho


Carvermu:-tachc Bcanyi-.n·t here

Don't ) ou think my hec,1ming? 1t may he coming. but it yet.

The Parisian Cloak & Suit House fl7here ~·he

Bradfield I hope the flo"·crs I ~cnt you to wear at the dance came on time. Shc- :\o. they didn't; they came

c.

College W omen Trade

o. n. ~ l ac.- Did

Edwards· ing?

you take a sho\\'cr' :\o. is there one miss.\1\\'ays the \'Cry latest styles at a most reasonable price

~largaret Dubois- ! don't kno\\' what is the matter with me. I have such a tired feeling all the time. Doctor Let me see your tongue.

·:--·-·-----·-·. ...............-.--.-.-.. .. ......·:· Hagen &Cushing Company BUTCHERS AND PACK ERS \\' c manufacture the famous " [ Dt\1 10 PRIDE" Brand Lard, Sugar-cured Bacon and I Iams and Sausage of al l kinds.

Phone MOSCOW

16 7

MOSCOW, IDAHO /Jomt• of tire ( ·. of I. R. C.\ RTER.

~I gr.

.:..., _._._...........................-..........._._....................-._--···:. A uto Bus

Strictly Modern

Hotel Moscow T. J\1. WRTC: IIT, Prop.

IDAHO

.:.................. ........ .. ... ..... .. ... ..... ..... .. .-•..•..•_•..•...:.. ,

,

Cold Storage Market MEATS AND GROCERIES Meat Phone 7 .\11

kind~

Grocery Phone 291

of Fresh and Cured Sausage. Lard. Poultry and Fish. .\lso a complete line of fancy and staple Croceries. " If it is t o eat we have it" IDAHO MOSCOW ~!cats.

G ril l 1n Connection E u r opea n Pl a n

MOSCOW

IDAHO

Page 1'wo Hundred antl Ninety-live


C) From our complete :;tock of \\. aterman · ~ Foun tain Pens. you will find the kind of a point thtll ..,II it-. your hand. C) \ \\·aterman Pen makes an ideal graduation gift for you to g-i,·e your classmates.

fJ Other suitable graduation gifb front tht· llolt~t· oi :-;ha" & Borden Co. are: Engra ,·ed Person a I Cards r l~trcrs Gift Stationery E,·ersharp and .\utopoint Pencils Eastman Kodaks Diaries and 17inc Leather Goods

.

Pa!:"tl Two ll und•·<'cl ancl Nlnety-sh.


l ~

!•

THE MODERN BARBER SHOP \\'c .\pprcriatc Yonr Patronage

+

•+

0 . R (;OSSETT

~

• t

•~

~LOSCO\\'

;

!

·=····-····. •··•. ···•···"····. ................................................:.

t

The White Shoe Shine Parlor

+

t;

;

!

I

/;or l.adi..s a111f C:c11ls

\\' E

~

;

Deans oi the Campn:-

~

CL1~.\::\ .\:\I> DYE \LL Kl:\DS OF SIIOES

;

.!.

110 Ea't Thircl

The C. M. Fassett

CEO. HEI.LOS

Co.~

Inc.

LABORATORY SUPPLIES Spokane

Palo:'<' Two I I un<l•·ecl an <I Nlnety-se,·en


The .D~nte .Ditthet< hyoinS? hip be§ to expi~ln how if' t-11 h~ppened

The bi.t•d. vho fAlls:> i. 11 1ove ihe fit·A> time uui in s:>l~-,., on te11ins evel')"'on(' ,\ bN t·

it.

The mcni'.~.Hy;;> dented boob v ho ho8.P the

l'etephone wi.~h hiP lin 1ft h.\tl'er j,,~ ,,{'I et• .P\.\pp~i·

l'age Two Hunth·e<l and Ninety-eight


MOSCOW CREAM E RY

.\lannfa.-turas of

MOSCOW BRAND ICE CR EAM AN D BUTTER .\IOSCO\V

lD.\110

Father said. .. I intend to to keep The roof well painted; It will last longer.'' Tht•n suddenly I a:-ked ~ister If that was the reason For her coating ller face .\nd to my surprise. ~he got sore.

"Dear Thelma." wrote a young man; "pardon me; l'm getting so forgetful. l proposed to you last night. hut really I forget whether you said yes or no." .. Dear Elmer." she replied hy note ; .. so glad to hear rrom you ! I knew that 1 said no to some one last night; but I had forgotten who· it was."

.:·····•··•····"····-···•···•··•···..····..···•··•·····•····..... ·-····-···•··-·-·-·..·•··•..···•. .. .. .. .. ..... ........ .. ..... ... .. ._...............·-···•···•········:.

UNIVERSITY MEN &WOMEN WHO PLAN BU SIN E SS CAREERS May have occassion to become better acquainted with us as the years go by. marily we are a STATIONERY and OFFICE SUPPLY HOUSE .

Pri-

Supplying the needs for every branch of modern busi ness- Bank and Corporatio n supplies, Art Metal and Globe-Wernicke Filing Equipment, Standard Office Desks and Rand Systems -essential equipment to modern commercial life. May we have the opportunity of serving you in the future.

707-709-711 Sprague Avenue SPOKANE

Page Two Hundred and Xlnety-nlne


Pacific Hotel ··.lnotlrcr .\'amc for " '""•'"

SPOK.\:\£. l ' S. \ .

I f

Ql'.-\ LI TY- J:est Ah'a'" SER\'ICE That Satisfies PR ICE .\ !ways Right

!

f

Complete Varil'ly of Fresh and Smnkl·<l Fish Oyster' and St•a Foods Recein.'<l Dail)

i

Inland Market

1

,\

well conducted lintel. caterin1; to a ~uhstaatial class oi pe.>ple at reaso nable rate~ Our Fine :\ c\\ Lnhhy and otht·r ft•aturc> of o ur compktt·l ~ Rem odckcl llol\.'1 arc tl! l \\ ready to st•rn· you

GOOD MEATS

1

I !'

C O M P LETE RES T AURANT SE R V I CE

C \RL I·

.··•··•·····•···•··•··•··•··· . ..... ..... ......._......... .....................:.

The Hub For a Square Deal

S h oes

You, too, will call our h<HtM.' "./notlrcr .\'a1111' for 11om,•"

II lid

C l o thing

H o t el

P ac ifi c

SPOK .-\:\E. l'

S.

\:\DERSO:\

l'ho nt• 124

\

.\1< >SCO\\

JD\110

·.···-····-·····:···•··•···•···-··..·-·..•··•..·······•·····•···-·····-·-·-·..··-····•···..•··•..····-····-····--·..• ...........................................·-···•··•··•··•··=·

"That's "·here

\

Pa~Ce

Tht'e\' Hundred

m:

money goes"


ILLUSTRATIONS Eftp Alc>NPI"J(UJfor

9arlicular .9't>opk

11w 'En~~avtrw U\ au.r Anuual ~~by w: We alro <?lttx>d to ham1k the Enyavi~ &>f tM next Annual fot ar a ~uk. ou~

cu.riomQfJ

compl.ituent u.r l:y placing

tlw1f ~ h.a.ncV

Ofdev

itt

OUf

..•

l':t):'t' ThrN• llunclt·t><l ancl One:>


Ruth rode in my cycle car. In the scat in back of me. It took a bump at fifty-fi,·e. .\ncl rode on ··Ruthlessly··. Li, cs of g-reat men oft remind us of a- legal holiday. \\'hatsoen.~r a man sews always

rips .

T ; ~

I

~

i~ I

.!.

~hrontz - .\1 ~ g-reat-grandfather carried a drum all through the Rc,·olutionary \\' ar.

Cowen- . \nd whenc\·cr he sighted the encm.' he heat it. 1 suppose.

I le who intends to get up with the sun shouldn't sit up late with the daughter.

.;............................................................................................._•..•..•-·-·-···•··,· --·····•··•·····•···..····-···•··•··•··•··•············-·-- ·=· HIGHEST QUALITY FURS AT LOWEST PRICES FURS MADE TO ORDER, REMODELING, REPAIRING Large

~tock

~ummcr

Fur

Furs

~torage

-\11~0LCTELY

Rl(l ~prag-ue .\,·e.

RELI.\llLE

Opposite Da,·enport lintel

·=--·-·--·-.....·--.--.-----.. 4-'·---.._...__._.__.__._.. ............ ...... . . . .......-......·-·---·----·-......;. There's not to reaso n why ; There's but to Look and Buy 11'/to·o· ,,.,.

slro~t·

Fashion Par k C l othes TAILORED .\T F,\ SI li ON PARK

.\ college professor wanted to get bright with a street urchin and asked the boy what time it was by his nose. The boy sni\'eled and replied: ".\line ai;,·t runnin': what time is it by yours?" In the par lor there were three . T he g irl, t he parlor lamp . and he. Two is company: no doubtThat is why th e lamp went out. " Don't kiss me plt•asc." sweet .\Tary cried. Tt isn't customary . .\ nd then. Oh then vou should ha ,·e heard · That fellow cus-tn-.\1 ary.

R

C.

Beach Co.

l.ewiston . .\1

I~

:\ . ~

I daho

ST 0 RE

Pa~e Three Hundred and Two

Holding It happened at the football game \\'hen she saicl she would freeze; lie kindly offered her his coat . ~he said. ''I'll take the slee\'es."


Worthington Engines W orthington Battery Light Plants Quicker-Yet Was hing M achines New H olland Feed Grinders Advance Stalls and Stanchions Hummer Plow s Hummer Harrows Hummer Spreaders l>islrilmlors

and

iu

.\ 'o rlhcnr

l!aslcru

Idah o

ll 'aslriuylo 11

1/'IIOI.IiS. II.Ii . 1\'0 NliT./11.

Butterfield-Elder Implement Co., Ltd. ~IOSCO\\' .

But C u:;h ie

ID.\110

·=-·------.........._.__......_.-........._.•_________._._._.___...._............ ·-·-·-----·--.-..--··-...·----·..·:·

I[SYMS·YOKK~COAYANY ~·II TIL\JIO ' S

LE .\DI:\G

PRINTERS &

BINDERS

.\n Idaho Institution. own ed by Idahoans. Paying Taxes in Idah o and patronizing ldaho Schools and the L'niversity KEEP YOUR CIIILORE\' 1:\ ID.\IIO'S SCHOOLS \\'() L' :\ 1 VERSITY .\:\D GET YOUR PRl:\TI:\G. BI:\DI:\C. BL.\:\K BOOKS. CAT.\LOGCES. BCLLETI:\S .\:\1> CO~I~IER C I\1. WORK DO:\E 1:\ TillS STATE.

. \11 work guaranteed as to quality. full count and workmanship. Look f 1r our label

ELKS' llCI LDI :\(;

L·n ion product. I:O!SI·:. IIJ \lfl)


\\' h en

You

Think

of

Mu s i c Th in k

of

" !low can you tell th e differen ce between lig ht and h eavy oper a,.. .. By the weight of th e costumes.'' - Tiger.

B A ILE Y'S Popula r. C lassical and I .ihrary :\Iusic Band and Orchestra Instr ument,;

Porter-Car ry your bag. boss? :\ e,·er h u s· a bottle yet.-Gargoyle.

Ed-\\' h y strom ·'Si " .

do

Co-ed- I tcca usc (I I 111111111)

818 ~prague .\\-emtc Opposite Da\·enport :\l ain Entrance SPOK.\XE, \\'ASHTXGTO.\'

they call of

Swan-

h is

size

I

~he- \\ ' h y don 't those tramps roll off the top of t hat freight car? lle-\\'hy . because they arc su ch rou gh ch aracters . dear 1

. \ little blunder now and t h en I s relished by the w isest men .

·=··•···. ···•···..·-···•··•··•··•··•··•··•··•··•··•··•···· ·····-···•-•···-···•··•··•··•··•··•··•··•··•··•··•···•·····•···.....................................,..•..•..•..•..•..•.•;.

The Shield . of Satisfaction \ \ .omen who pride themseh·es on their cooking have learned t h rou gh year s of experimenting that they can always depend on ROY.\L CLL'B PL.RE FOOD PRODUCTS. l f you, too. "·ould proYide your table w it h the maximum of qual ity and wholesomeness at a minim um cost just say " ROY.\L CLUB" to your g rocer.

Lewiston Me rcantile Company Wholesale Distributors

Page Th•·ee Hundred and Fou•·






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